Italian is a kind of Latin, in a sense, since Italian developed from Latin.
Latin still has its old case endings such as -us, -um, -ius, -ii, -ae, etc.--this is the easiest way to spot Latin. If you see small words such as "il," "la," "e," "sono," etc., then it's likely Italian.
In Italian words are inflected to show the singular, plurals and gendered cases. In Latin the normative, accusative and gendered cases have special word endings. Thought they sound very alike, unless you do not speak either of the two languages is the only way you would mix them. Usually that is because they share similar roots.
how can you tell the difference between a tortoise and a turtle by shell in picture
Can you tell the difference between Vyvanse and Concerta in a drug test
Vending machines have laser scanners that can tell the difference between the bills.
you can tell the difference between right and wrong from the little voice inside your head
please tell me the difference between thickness
no but you can tell the difference by taste
No difference
No. You can't tell the difference, for one reason: There IS no difference.
tell me the answer
tell me
tell me