Yes, but it comes from Latin, from the name of the nymph Echo. Zeus' wife Hera took away her voice and condemned her to be only capable of repeating other people's talk, not to speak on her own.
Eco is an Italian equivalent of the English word "echo." The pronunciation will be "EH-ko" in Italian.
si'uleo
Arabic word for echo
The plural of 'echo' is 'echoes.'
It is echo in English
No, "echo" is not an Italian word since the spelling in the Italian islands and peninsula is eco. The feminine singular noun in question traces its origins back to the ancient Greek ἠχή (ēkhḗ) for "noise" or "sound" by way of the Latin word ecco. The pronunciation will be "EH-ko in Pisan Italian.
The plural form of the word "echo" is "echoes."
Echo (English) -> 에코 : phonetically eko (Korean)
echo sounding, localization
Yes, the word echo has two syllables. (ech-o)
"AND" is the conjunction linking the two words, echo, and pot.
echo cat will print out the word 'cat' on the command line. cat echo will attempt to list the contents of a file called 'echo'.