Salt in Italian is translated as "sale."
In Italian, Salina is an island that comes from the word Salt Mill
No, "minigooch" does not mean anything in Italian. It is not an Italian word or term.
No, "Cicci" does not mean "Frank" in Italian. "Frank" in Italian is "Francesco" or "Franco."
No, "tt" does not mean aunt in Italian. In Italian, "aunt" is typically translated as "zia."
"Fert" does not have a direct translation in Italian. It is not an Italian word.
In Italian, Salina is an island that comes from the word Salt Mill
Sale is an Italian equivalent of the English word "salt." The masculine singular noun may reference "sea salt" or "sodium chloride" literally or "common sense" loosely in English. The pronunciation will be "SA-ley" in Italian.
~Salt
dried and salt cod
sel et poivre
i hate you all
Sale is an Italian equivalent of the English word "salt".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The pronunciation will be "SA-le" in Italian.
In Italian, "lui" means "he" when used as a pronoun to refer to a male subject. It is one of the ways to address or talk about a male person.
"Novae" means "new" in Italian.
You can be French and speak Italian, but speaking Italian does not mean you are French.
Stefania is how you say Steffanie in Italian.
Risplendere is Italian for shine.