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"Thanks for the Add!" in English means Grazie per l'Add!in Italian.

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What is 'aggiungerai' when translated from Italian to English?

Aggiungerai in Italian means "You'll add" in English.


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It's The Same, Only You Add "Ini" at The End (ie."Grinchini")


What is 'Please add me' when translated from English to Italian?

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What is 'Add me up' when translated from English to Italian?

Aggiungimi! in the singular and Aggiungetemi! in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Add me up!" Context makes clear whether one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ad-DJOON-djee-mee" in the singular and "AD-djoon-DJEY-tey-mee" in the plural in Italian.


What is 'add you as a friend' when translated from English to Italian?

Aggiungerti come amica in the feminine and aggiungerti come amico in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "add you as a friend." Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ad-DJOON-djer-tee KO-mey a-MEE-ka" in the feminine and "ad-DJOON-djey-tee KO-mey a-MEE-ko" in the masculine in Italian.


What is 'Do you ever talk to my Mom' when translated from English to Italian?

'Do you ever talk to my Mom' can be translated in Italian as "Parli (Do you talk) mai (ever) con (to) mia madre (my Mom)". It is important to add a question mark when writing since Italian does not require a subject-after-verb construction for interrogative sentences; in speech, the tone usually is enough to indicate a question. If the subject is plural, "do you talk" = parlate.


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What is 'Puis-je aussi ajouter' when translated from French to English?

may I also add...


What is 'Good morning Laura Thank you for the add here on Facebook' when translated from English to Italian?

Buon giorno, Laura! Grazie per l'aggiunta qui su Facebook! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Good morning, Laura! Thank you for the add here on Facebook!" The declarative/exclamatory statements model a rare instance whereby the sentence construction is immediately recognizable between English and Italian. The pronunciation will be "bwon DJOR-no LOW*-ra GRA-tsyey per lad-DJOON-ta kwee soo feyss-book" in French. *Like the exclamation of pain "Ow!" in English.


What is 'large' when translated from English to Italian as a suffix?

The endings '-ona', '-ono', '-one', and '-oni' add a 'large' quality to a noun. For example, the feminine gender noun 'casa' means 'house'. But 'la casona' means 'the large house'.


What is the phrase 'Thank you for the add' when translated from English to Japanese?

'Addo shite kurete arigatou gozaimasu.'