It means "skylark".
Etto was born on 1981-03-08.
no way his a greet football player
no hes not dead hes 29 rite now
Etto (or Eto) is a slang which is similar to Ano, and is the equivalent to saying "ummm..." in English. Commonly used to create time while thinking about what one wants to say. Typically I have heard "Ano" used more at the beginning of a sentence, or to let someone know you are speaking to them ( as in "ummm excuse me..." if you wanted to ask a question of someone), but apparently etto is used as well.
3.5274 is what one (1) etto is in ounces.Specifically, the ettofunctions as a traditional Italian measurement. As it is used here, it is a masculine noun in its singular form. The plural form is etti.The pronunciation will be "ET-to" in the singular and "ET-tee" in the plural.
"Hectogram" is an English equivalent of the Italian word etto. The masculine singular noun references a weight of 100 grams (3.53 ounces). The pronunciation will be "ET-to" in Italian.
You mean etto? It's the equivalent of 'um', you can't write Ett with Japanese characters.
Samuel Etoo the Cameroon footballer plays his club football with Inter Milan.
The cast of Tango Finlandia - 2007 includes: Kaarina Etto Lauri Hannu Laiska Lajunen Timo Pesonen Tomi Riionheimo Petteri Sopanen Antti Takkunen
"hg" is the symbol for the etto.Specifically, the term in question functions - in its colloquially and conversationally abbreviated form - as a traditional Italian measurement. The complete designation is ettogrammo ("hectogram"). The respective pronunciations will be "ET-to" and "ET-to-GRAM-mo" in Italian.
Clarinetto is an Italian equivalent of the English word "clarinet."Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It is formed by adding the diminutive suffix -etto ("dear, little, small") to the masculine noun clarino ("trumpet"). The pronunciation will be "KLA-ree-NET-to" in Italian.
Nonnetto and nonnino are Italian equivalents of the English word "Grampa." The masculine singular nouns literally mean "little grandfather," from the addition of the masculine singular suffixes -etto or -ino for "dear, nice, sweet little" to the masculine singular noun nonno for "grandfather." The respective pronunciations will be "non-NET-to" and "non-NEE-no" in Pisan Italian.