Cacciatore di leoni and cacciatrice di leoni are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "hunter of lions." Context makes clear whether a female (case 2) or a masculine (example 1) gender suits. The respective pronunciations will be "KAT-tcha-TO-rey dee ley-O-nee" in the masculine and "KAT-tcha-TREE-tchey dee ley-O-nee" in the feminine in Pisan Italian.
Leoni is an Italian equivalent of the English word "lions." The masculine plural noun may be preceded immediately by the masculine plural i since Italian employs definite articles even when English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "ley-O-nee" in Pisan Italian.
There are several terms that are used interchangeably, "une bande de lions", "un clan de lions", "une tribu de lions", and "une groupe de lions".
Pride in japanese:kenshikigouganjimangoutsukubariIn Japanese,mure or 群れ
The only lions in Italy are in zoos.
Hunter
meanie hunters, :(
There are no Italian lions. Lions are only in Africa in the wild today. There is a very small pride of Asian lions in a preserve in the Gir Forest, but other than that, all lions in the wild are in Africa.
french: deux lions italian:due leoni
Leoni con le ali is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "lions with wings."Specifically, the masculine noun leoni means "lions." The preposition con means "with." The feminine plural definite article le means "the." The feminine noun ali means "wings."The pronunciation is "leh-OH-nee kohn leh AH-leh."
Leone is an Italian equivalent of the English word "lion."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is il ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").The pronunciation is "leh-OH-neh."
The plural of leone ("lion") is leoni ("lions") in Italian.
Leo is already Latin: it's the word for "lion".It appears in the following forms:singularnominative/vocative leo ("[a/the] lion" - subject)genitive leonis ("of [a/the] lion")dative leoni ("to/for [a/the] lion")accusative leonem ("[a/the] lion" - object)ablative leone ("from/by/with [a/the] lion")pluralnominative/vocative leones ("[the] lions" - subject)genitive leonum ("of [the] lions")dative leonibus ("to/for [the] lions")accusative leones ("[the] lions" - object)ablative leonibus ("from/by/with [the] lions")