Une grande victoire is a literal French equivalent of the English phrase "a big win." The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "yoon grawnd veek-twar" in French.
"Chelsea will win!" in English means Chelsea vincerà! in Italian.
"Ganar" means to win.
Noun: kachi Verb: katsu
"Enter To Win" in French can be translated as "Participez pour gagner." This phrase is commonly used in contests and promotions to invite people to take part for a chance to win a prize.
"Coronation" generally, "Crown!" or "I (he, it, one, she) enthrones"of "(that) I (he, it, one, she) may enthrone" as a verb, "profanity" in French Canada, "saker falcon" in falconry, and "win" in sports are English equivalents of the French word sacre. Context makes clear which definition suits the masculine singular noun. The pronunciation will be "sak" in northern French and "sa-kruh" in southerly French.
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Spanish: Usted gana a veces y usted no hace a veces. English: Sometimes you win and sometimes you do not.
Vincerò is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I shall win." The word most famously refers to a line in the Nessun dorma ("Nobody sleeps") aria of the opera Turandhot by Giacomo Puccini (December 22, 1858 to November 29, 1924). The pronunciation will be "VEEN-tchey-RO" in Italian.
The French & English
The French & English
William Pitt
Italiani per la vittoria! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italians for the win!" The phrase also translates literally as "Italians for the victory!" in English. The pronunciation will be "EE-ta-LYA-nee per la veet-TO-rya" in Pisan Italian.