"I have many talents" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ho molti talenti. The first person singular present indicative and masculine plural adjective and noun also translate into English as "I have many gifts." The pronunciation will be "oh MOL-tee ta-LEN-tee" in Italian.
"He (she) has many talents" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ha molti talenti. The third person singular present indicative and masculine plural adjective and noun also translate into English as "(formal singular) You have many gifts." Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "a MOL-tee ta-LEN-tee" in Italian.
It means He/she has many Talents in Italian.
"Congratulazioni a molti" is how it is said.
molti di più
"Molti soldi" is an Italian equivalent of "much money."Specifically, the masculine plural adjective "molti" means "much." The masculine plural noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee."
Molti ragazzi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Many boys!" The masculine plural phrase also translates as "Lots of boyfriends!" in English. The pronunciation will be "MOL-tee ra-GAT-tsee" in Pisan Italian.
"Much money" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "molti soldi."Specifically, the masculine plural adjective "molti" means "much." The masculine plural noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee."
"I miss many sweets" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mi mancano molti dolci. The first person singular pronoun, third person plural present indicative, and masculine plural adjective and noun translate literally into English as "To me are lacking many sweets (desserts)." The pronunciation will be "mee MAN-ka-no MOL-tee DOL-tchee" in Italian.
Molti soldi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a lot of money".Specifically, the masculine adjective molti means "a lot of, lots, many". The masculine noun soldi translates as "coins, money". The pronunciation will be "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee" in Italian.
Molti soldi and tanti soldi are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "big money." The speaker's birth place and personal preferences determine the choice, with the first option literally translating as "lots of money" and the second as "so much money" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "MOL-tee SOL-dee" and "TAN-tee SOL-dee" in Italian.
"Many sweets, everyone loves them!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Molti dolci, tutto li ama!Specifically, the masculine adjective molti is "many". The masculine noun dolci means "sweets". The masculine indefinite pronoun tutto means "everybody, everyone". The personal pronoun li means "them". The verb amatranslates as "(I) am loving, do love, love".The pronunciation will be "MOHL-tee DOHL-tchee TOTT-toh lee AH-mah" in Italian.
molti di più