They mean whatever the family wants them to mean. One of the most famous families is the Medici family. They have red balls on a gold shield.
No, the words 'Italian' and 'Sicilian' don't mean the same in English. Neither do they mean the same thing in Italian or Sicilian. In Italian, the words are 'italiano' and 'siciliano'. The word 'italian' refers to a native of the Italian peninsula. The word 'siciliano' refers to an Italian who's native to the island of Sicily.
sorry your question can't be answered in other words - i don't know
"Mountain crest" is an English equivalent of the Italian word cresta. The feminine singular noun also translates as "mountain peak," "mountain ridge," "mountain summit," "rooster comb" and "rooster crest" in English. The pronunciation will be "KREY-sta" in Pisan Italian.
In the last boss, the crest is an hourglass. But, if you mean the other crest, it's the Triforce.
which crest if you mean the triforce or hourglass, you have to draw it on the door, if you mean the sacred crest, it is past the first red door, the one you draw the hourglass
It's not an idiom. It means just what it says -- something is on the crest of a wave. The crest is the top of the wave.
2 Words GOOGLE TRANSLATE
According to google translate, cookies. The root words "bis" and "cotto" literally mean "Twice" and "baked." (In Italian it means "Baked Twice"
The words est-ce are French and translate into English as the words is this. These words translate into Italian as e questo.
Semina is an Italian equivalent of the Hebrew word mizra.Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. The Hebrew and the Italian words mean "sowing". The pronunciation will be "SEY-mee-nah" in Italian.
Your mom. no
Molto is an Italian equivalent of the French word très.Specifically, the French and the Italian words are adverbs. They mean "very". The pronunciation will be "MOHL-toh" in Italian and "treh" in French.