Necessiti il gabinetto is one of many Italian equivalents of 'Do you need the toilet'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'necessiti' means '[you] are needing, do need, need'. The masculine definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'gabinetto' means 'water closet'. The phrase is pronounced 'neh-cheh-SEE-tee eel gah-bee-NET-toh'.
Another person of the verb is used if the listener is senior in age or position to the speaker. That form is 'necessita', which involves the 'formal you' as opposed to the 'informal you' above. It's pronounced 'neh-cheh-SEE-tah'.
"You need the toilet!" in English is Hai bisogno del bagno! in Italian.
"Where is the toilet?" in English is Dov'è il bagno? in Italian.
"Your toilet did not overflow today!" in English is Il tuo gabinetto non ha fatto troppopieno oggi! in Italian.
Is your toilet tank leaking and in need of fixing?
Signori and Uomini are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Gents Toilet." The masculine plural nouns translate literally as "Gentlemen" and "Men" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "see-NYO-ree" and "WO-mee-nee" in Pisan Italian.
Il water is an Italian equivalent of the English word "toilet."Specifically, the masculine singular definite article ilmeans "the." The masculine noun water is an English loan word. The pronunciation is "eel vah-tehr."
Is your toilet wobbly and needs fixing?
they need a toilet
no
Is the toilet unstable and in need of fixing because it is not securely attached to the floor?
1. if you don't go to the toilet when you need to you could die so probarly yes but i'm only 99.9% + 0.1% that you need to go toilet. 2. you always go toilet but if you did'nt get to the toilet in time you would die.
Bagno, gabinetto, and servizi are Italian equivalents of the English word "toilet." Context makes clear whether a private (case 1) or public (examples 2, 3) access suits. The respective pronunciations will be "BA-nyo," "GA-bee-NET-to," and "ser-VEE-tsee" in Italian.