No! Anthony is an Italian name!
The Italian nickname for "Peter" is "Pietro."
Pietro is the Italian equivalent of the English name "Peter."Specifically, the Italian name is a masculine proper noun. It may be pronounced "PYEH-troh." The feminine equivalent for a woman, Pietra, will be pronounced "PYEH-trah."
Piero and Pietro are Italian equivalents of the English name "Peter." The masculine proper name traces its origins back to the Greek πέτρος (petros) for "rock" or "stone." The respective pronunciations will be "PYEY-ro" and "PYEY-tro" in Pisan Italian.
"Little Peter" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Perini. The surname tracks its origins back as one of the diminutives -- whose equivalents in English include "Pete" or "Petey" -- for the masculine proper name Pietro ("Peter"). The pronunciation will be "pey-REE-nee" in Pisan Italian.
Di Pietro is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Perkins." The Italian translation literally means "of Peter," one of the meanings of the English surname whose origins go back to "kin of Pierre ("Peter"). The pronunciation will be "dee PYEH-tro" in Pisan Italian.
Peter pan....
NO ; He is ITALIAN
Peter Blume has written: 'Peter Blume, the Italian drawings'
"Saint Peter" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Zampedri.Specifically, the Italian word is a proper noun. It is a regional variation of the Italian phrase San Pietro, of the same meaning. The pronunciation will be "zahm-PEY-dree" in terms of the variation and "sahn-PYEY-troh" in terms of the standard.
Piero in Italian means "Peter" in English.
"Peter" and "saints" is the English equivalent of the Italian name Piersante.Specifically, the Italian name appears to be most common in the city of Pescara, in the central western Italian region of Abruzzo. It dates back at least to the sixteenth century. It is formed by combining the proper noun Piero, which is a contraction of Pietro ("Peter"), and the feminine plural noun Sante("female saints, holy women, sainted women").The pronunciation is "pyehr-SAHN-tee."
Ciao, Pietro is an Italian equivalent of 'Hello, Peter'. The interjection 'ciao' means 'hello' and 'goodbye'. The masculine gender noun 'Pietro' is an Italian proper noun that means 'Peter'. The phrase is pronounced 'chow pee-EH-troh'.