Ho bisogno di un dottore in Italian is "I need a doctor" in English.
Dottore in Italian means "doctor" in English.
"I'm hurt. I need a doctor" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Sono ferito. Ho bisogno di un dottore. The pronunciation of the masculine singular independent clauses -- which translate literally as "I'm injured (bruised, distressed, injured, offended, wounded). I have need of a doctor" -- will be "SO-no fey-REE-to oh bee-ZO-nyo dee oon dot-TO-rey" in Italian.
Dottor before a name and Dottore not followed by a name in Italian mean "Doctor" in English.
It's the abbreviation for "Dottore" (Doctor), so like Dr. in English.
I suppose that the word is dottore; but in Italy 50 % from the peoples are dottore.
Ti amo, dottore mio! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love you, my doctor!"Specifically, the personal pronoun ti is "(informal singular) you". The verb amo means "(I) am loving, do love, love". The masculine noun dottore means "doctor". The masculine possessive adjective mio translates as "my".The pronunciation will be "tee AH-moh doht-TOH-rey MEE-oh" in Italian.
"Dr." is an English equivalent of the Italian word Dott.ssa. The feminine singular noun in question serves as an abbreviation for Dottoressa ("female doctor"). The pronunciation will be "DOT-tsa" for the abbreviation and "DOT-to-RES-sa" for the full word in Italian.
"Doctor" is an English equivalent of the Italian word dottor or dottore.Specifically, the Italian word means "doctor." The masculine definite article is il ("the"). The masculine indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").The pronunciation is "doht-TOH-reh."*The vowel e drops before a noun that begins with a consonant.
Dottore is the Italian form of address for a professional male. It's pronounced 'doht-TOH-ray'. It may be translated as 'doctor', in the sense of a medical doctor or especially in terms of a university graduate. The form for a female is Dottoressa, which is pronounced 'doht-toh-REHS-sah'.
Lui è (un) dottore and Lui è (un) medico are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "He is a doctor."Specifically, the subject pronoun lui is "he." The present indicative verb è means "(he/it/she) is" or "(formal singular you) are" according to context. The masculine singular indefinite article un -- which may or may not be used depending upon context and the speaker's birthplace -- means "a, an." The masculine nouns dottore and medicotranslate as "doctor" in the respective senses of "(academic or medical) doctoral degree-holder" and "(medical) doctor."The respective pronunciations will be "lwee eh (oon) dot-TO-rey" and "lwee eh (oon) MEH-dee-ko" in Italian.
"Bel dottore italiano" is an Italian equivalent of "handsome Italian doctor."Specifically, the masculine singular adjective "bel, bello"* means "beautiful, handsome." The masculine singular noun "dottore" means "doctor." Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one"). The masculine singular adjective "italiano" means "Italian."The pronunciation is "BEHL doht-TOH-reh EE-tah-LYAH-noh."*The final vowel "o" may drop before a noun that begins with a consonant.
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