If you mean baked as in high, I'm not 100% sure, but you might be able to say
"cotto".
baked= cotto. It also means cooked
To say fake in Italian you say finto.
'Basta' is stop in Italian You can say this to somebody as a 'Stop it!' (Basta!)
Stallone italiano.
"Craft" in English is mestiere in Italian.
The building material that means "baked earth" in Italian is called Terracotta!
baked= cotto. It also means cooked
Biscotti
According to google translate, cookies. The root words "bis" and "cotto" literally mean "Twice" and "baked." (In Italian it means "Baked Twice"
Alexander's favourite food's are Italian and Japanese food + Baked potato with gravy and baked lamb. He is so Cute I Love him so much.
Are you talking about biscotti? It's made so crispy by being baked twice (Biscotti is Italian for 'Twice baked').
Terra cotta
'Al forno' is the Italian term for food that has been baked in an oven
Terra cotta is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "baked earth." The feminine singular noun and adjective/past participle may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or indefinite una ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "TER-ra KOT-ta" in Italian.
There are several nice recipes for an Italian dinner. Some of these include: Spinach Ravioli Lasagna, Meatballs, Hearty Italian Couscous, and Baked Ziti.
"Baked ham," "boiled must," or "earthenware tile" as a noun and "baked" or "cooked" as an adjective or past participle are English equivalents of the Italian word cotto. Context makes clear which meaning prevails for the masculine singular word. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "KOT-to" in Italian.
Alexander ludwig likes japanese food and italian food. he also likes baked potato with gravy and baked lamb. i love him