Yes, gondola, which is a Venetian boat, is an Italian word.
The word gondola is actually Italian and comes from the Medieval Latin word gondola. It is speculated that the word gondola may have come from the Greek word kondu, which means drinking vessel.
A gondolier. It is an Italian word.
The Italian word gondoliere (the person who steers the narrow Venetian boat called a gondola) in the plural is gondolieri.
"Little tail" literally and "Venetian single-oared boat" are English equivalents of the Italian word gondola. The feminine singular noun originates in the Greek word κοντούρα (kontoúra, "small tail") and most famously references the high-prowed, high-sterned, long, narrow, single-oared, small boat of Venice's canals. The pronunciation will be "GON-do-la" in Italian.
The Italian boat that is used to travel in the sinking Italian city, Venice, is the gondola.
That is the correct spelling of the noun "gondola" (Italian boat, or a structure having a similar shape, as with the occupied portion of a dirigible or blimp).
The noun 'gondola' is a concretenoun, a word for a physical thing.
Famed for its canals and gondola tours through those canals, the Italian city of Venice remains a destination for many travelers to the country. Currently, tours are offered on a daily basis.
The eleventh century may be the time when the gondola was developed. The Venetian boat in question requires more research into its etymology and invention even though it appears to exist as a word in the eleventh century and to inspire paintings from the fifteenth century onward according to Donna Leon's music book (with CD of barcarole) Gondola. The pronunciation will be "GON-do-la" in Italian.
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