Overpowering; Having more power; Stronger; More control
"Masculine" in English means maschile in Italian.
"The special (male) friend" is an English equivalent of "der spezieller Freund."The masculine singular definite article "der" means "the." The masculine singular adjective "spezieller" means "special." The masculine singular noun "Freund" means "friend."
Toro is an Italian equivalent of the English word "bull."Specifically, the masculine noun toro means "bull." Its masculine singular definite article il means "the." Its masculine singular indefinite article un means "a, one."The pronunciation is "TOH-roh."
Fuerta or fuerto means strong in English. Fuerta is the feminine & fuerto is masculine.
"The Dark Ages" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase I secoli bui.Specifically, the masculine definite article i means "the." The masculine noun secoli means "centuries, ages." The masculine adjective bui means "dark, obscure."The pronunciation is "SEH-koh-lee bwee."
"Dear love" is an English equivalent of the French phrase cher amour.Specifically, the masculine adjective cher means "dear." The masculine noun amour means "love." The pronunciation will be "she-rah-moor" in French.
"Authentic" in English means autentica in the feminine and autentico in the masculine in Italian.
"Nuevo" means "new" in English (a masculine new).
"Blank" in English means blanc in the masculine and blanche in the feminine in French.
The masculine form of "donna," which means "woman" in Italian, is "uomo," meaning "man." In English, the equivalent term for "donna" is "lady," and its masculine counterpart is "gentleman." In general, the masculine form varies by language, but "man" is the common English equivalent.
"My place" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il mio posto.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article ilmeans "the." The masculine possessive adjective mio means "my." The masculine noun posto means "place."The pronunciation is "eel MEE-oh POH-stoh."
The fingers is an English equivalent of 'les doigts'. The words in French are pronounced 'lay dwah'. The masculine definite article 'les' means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'doigts' means 'fingers'.