Negozio is an Italian equivalent of 'business'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'neh-GOH-tsee-oh'.
The language for Italian business emails is generally less formal than for Italian business letters
No, Adidas is not an Italian business or name since the group is German.
Padrone is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "business owner." The pronunciation of the masculine singular noun will be "pa-DRO-ney" in Italian.
The name Dior is French, not Italian.
No, the Papa John's pizza business is not Italian because the founding businessman, John Schnatter of Jeffersonville, Indiana is of German ancestry.
stereotypically, Italians own Italian restaurants, this is a subject for laughter in my household. Ps. I am Italian.
completo
Affari and impresaare two Italian equivalents of the English word "business."Specifically, the masculine noun affari means "business" affairs, dealings, matters. The feminine noun impresa translates as "business" company. The respective pronunciations will be "af-FA-ree" and "eem-PREY-sa" in Italian.
Nuovo negozio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "new business".Specifically, the masculine adjective nuovo means "new". The masculine noun negozio translates as "business". The pronunciation will be "NWO-vo ne-GO-tsyo" in Italian.
Hans Hildorsson has written: 'Business dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Business, Swedish, English language, English, Italian, Italian language, Swedish language
Marketing industriale is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "business marketing." The masculine singular noun and feminine/masculine singular adjective literally translate by word order into English as "marketing industrial." The pronunciation will be "mar-key-teen-geen-doo-STRYA-ley" in Italian.
Eggs have no business dancing with stones. The answer to 29 across on the Telegraph crossword from August 9 2008 is "eggs."