Lezioni di chimica is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "chemistry course." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "lessons of chemistry" in English. The pronunciation will be "ley-TSYO-nee dee KEE-mee-ka" in Italian.
"Of course not!" in English is Certo che no! in Italian.
Il secondo corso
The direct translation for 'i have some' is Ho alcune. There can be variations of course. Don't always trust online translators.
Piatti della cena is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "dinner courses." The culinary phrase translates literally as "plates of the dinner" in English. The pronunciation will be "PYAT-tee DEL-la TCHEY-na" in Italian.
"Street" is an English equivalent of the Italian word strada.Specifically, the word functions as a feminine noun in its singular form. It also may be translated as "course, direction, highway, path, road, way" both figuratively and literally. But whatever the meaning, the pronunciation will be "STRA-da" in Italian.
CV is the same in English and Italian.Specifically, the acronym comes from the Latin phrase curriculum vitae. It literally means "course of life." The pronunciation will be "koor-REE-koo-loom VEE-teye" in Italian.
It translates to mai lasciar andare in Italian. Of course, depending on the context of the sentence this may vary. Don't trust all online translators they can be deceiving.
Strada is an Italian equivalent of the English word "highway." The feminine singular noun in question also may be followed by the feminine/masculine adjective principale("main") or statale ("state") and rendered into English as "avenue, course, route, street, thoroughfare, way" depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "STRA-da" in Italian.
Good, of course is an English equivalent of 'BuongiÃ?'. The masculine adjective 'buono'* means 'good, fortunate'. The adverb 'giÃ?' means 'already, of course'. Together, they're pronounced 'bwohn jah'.*The vowel 'o' of 'buono' may drop before a word that begins with a consonant.
Ma certo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "But of course."Specifically, the conjunction ma means "but." The masculine adjective certotranslates literally as "certain" and loosely as "of course." The pronunciation will be "ma TCHER-to" in Italian.
The Italian language is said to have over 250000 words, take into a account their English translations and the average lengh of a definition (lets say 20) that would make over 10 million words DISPLAYED in the dictionary. The translated amount would of course be more or less a quarter of a million.
Curso de ingles gratis is a spanish phrase which can be translated into English to mean free english course, or course of free english, depending on the variation of the translator.