The masculine singular nouns bombolone and kraffen are Italian equivalents of the German word krapfen. The respective pronunciations of the filled doughnut equivalents will be "BOM-bo-LO-ney" throughout most of Italy and "KRAF-fen" along peninsular Italy's northern borders.
In Italian, 'krapfen' translates to 'bombolone' or 'krapfen', which are fried pastries filled with jam or cream.
When translated from Italian to French, 'Ciao' becomes 'Salut', which is commonly used as a greeting in French.
Arrivederci is Italian for 'goodbye'. It is translated 'au revoir' in French.
'DEUCE' in Italian is translated as 'DUE'.
Salt in Italian is translated as "sale."
"Chris" in Italian is translated to "Cristiano."
"German" in English is tedesco in Italian.
Ich bin ein Krapfen.
German to Italian = ha sfilata
Tedesco in Italian means "German" in English.
"donut" translates as "Krapfen".doughnut = Donut = Pfannkuchen.or Berliner
Ianni is just one Italian equivalent of the German name Hans. The pronunciation of the masculine diminutive for the proper noun Giovanni ("John") will be "YAN-nee" in Italian.
The translation of the German word "Kompass" to English is "compass". Translated to French, it is "boussole", to Spanish, it is "brujula with inflection on the "u". Translated to Italian it is "bossola" and translated to Latin it is "cicumdabit"
"Hi!" in English is Sali! or Salut! in French, Hallo! or Tschau! in German, Ciao! in Italian and Allegra! in Romansh.
The German word for friend id Freund; all nouns are capitalized in German. The languages spoken in Switzerland are French, German, Italian, and Romansch.
Ich liebe dich in German means "I love you" in English and Ti amo in Italian.
Jamel is the same in German and Italian since Italian language-speakers often respect the name of a city, town or village as it is given in the original language. The pronunciation will be "dja-mel" or "ya-mel" depending upon the speaker's birthplace.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione