Figlio di Oliviero is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish name Álvarez. The masculine singular noun, possessive preposition, and masculine proper noun translate literally into English as "son of Oliver," which is the meaning of the Spanish surname ("son of Álvaro ["Oliver"]"). The respective pronunciations will be "FEE-lyo dee O-lee-VYEH-ro" in Italian and "AL-ba-ress" in Spanish.
French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish all evolved from Latin.
italian, a +
Six English, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and German
Christopher Columbus was versed in several languages including Italian, Latin, Spanish, and Greek.
Columbus was NOT Italian, but Spanish and he sailed for Spain. He was from a Spanish noble family who were rivals of the crown so he took on a persona to get funding. His log and journals were all in Spanish, his wife was from a Spanish noble family, and he spoke Spanish. Nothing points him out as Italian.
Amigo in Spanish is amico in Italian.
José in Spanish means Giuseppi in Italian.
Marcos in Portuguese and Spanish is Marco in Italian.
Manuel in Portuguese and Spanish is Manuele in Italian.
"Isabella" in English and Spanish is Isabella in Italian.
Felicia in Italian and Spanish is Félicie in French.
niente
Dormitorio in Italian and Spanish means "dormitory" in English.
Equivalente in Italian, Portuguese and Spanish is "equivalent" in English.
Translation: muchacha
Casa in Italian, Portuguese and Spanish is "home" or "house" in English.
Guerra in Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish means "war" in English.