"Jesaydù" and "aldilà" are not known Italian words. It is possible that they are made-up words or belong to a dialect. Without more context or information, it is difficult to determine their meaning.
"Time to Say Goodbye" is originally sung in Italian. It is a duet performed by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman.
From what I've learned, in Italian mitica means legendary, mythical, great, and as an exclamation/slang it means awesome like for ex.: "miticaaaaaa, stupenda canzone! Mi piace molto!" or "Awesomeeeeee, wonderful song! I really like it!"
Aria is an Italian loan word in French. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun -- which typically identifies the solo song by an opera's leading soprano or tenor -- will be "A-rya" in French in Italian.
"Crazy Loop" is a song by a Romanian artist named Dan Balan. The song features a mix of English and Spanish lyrics.
Italian is a great language! I am half Italian and half Portuguese and I love both of them! Let me tell Italians loveeeeeeeeeeeeee food!!!!! Christmas eve is always a big thing for them!So Italian is the language of food, you say?? ;)Italian is also the language of song.
This is an italian song. The title means: I will marry you because...
"Time to Say Goodbye" is originally sung in Italian. It is a duet performed by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman.
Its not a tempo. Its an Italian word meaning singable, or song-like.
Italian Love Song was created on 2004-11-05.
"Beautiful song" in English means bella canzone in Italian.
brucia la terra = the earth burns. it's Italian (not sicilian)
Arrivederci Roma is a famous classic Italian love song. It translates to "Goodbye to Rome." A chandrapore is another classical song.
Tempo is the Italian word that means "the speed of the song."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its meanings include "time, tense, weather." The pronunciation is "TEHM-poh."
Enzo Guidi has: Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1976. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1977. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1978. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1979. Played Himself - Host in "Concours eurovision" in 1984. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1984. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1985. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Commentator in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1986. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1987. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1988. Played Himself - Swiss Commentator: Italian Speaking Region in "The Eurovision Song Contest" in 1989.
Yes, Bella, Ciao ("Beautiful [female, one, woman], Goodbye") is an Italian folksong. It served as the song of the Italian partisans who opposed the fascist and rightist tendencies of Italian politics during World War II. The pronunciation will be "BEL-la tchow" in Italian.
The via dolorosa
(La) canzone.