Piano is Italian for "slowly," and in music "quietly."
It can be something like a button or something you press, for example, a piano has "teclas", and a computer has too (in the keyboard)
Three vowels.
The plural form for the noun piano is pianos, just add -s.
The plural form for the singular noun piano is pianos.
No, the noun 'piano' is a common noun, a general word for a type of musical instrument; a word for any piano of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:"Piano Man" by Billy JoelPiano Place, San Antonio, TXSteinway Grand Piano
Easily enough, it's "piano," pronounced "pee-ah-no."
The word Piano is a shortened form of the Italian name for the instrument Pianoforte, meaning soft and loud.
The word "piano" comes from the Italian word "pianoforte," which means "soft-loud" in English. The piano was named this way to describe its ability to produce both soft and loud sounds depending on how the keys are played.
English. It is the full word for piano. (Like telephone is the full word for phone)
The spanish word for piano is actually, piano.
the greek word for piano
No, the word piano is not an adverb.The word piano is a noun, since it is an object.
The most common use of the word "piano" in English is to name the instrument once known as pianoforte. The word also is used to mean a soft sound in music, whether played or sung. In Italian, the word can also be used outside a musical context, as in "Fai piano"--"Take it easy."
Yes, piano is an Italian word that prompts the same-spelled English loan noun.
The genitive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: piano's
Le Piano
The same - Piano