Grande scrivania and scrivania grande are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "large desk." Context makes clear whether emphasizing the largeness more (case 1) or less (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "GRAN-dey SKREE-va-NEE-a" and "SKREE-va-NEE-a GRAN-dey" in Italian.
"Teacher's desk" in English means cattedra in Italian.
La cattedra is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the teacher's desk." The feminine singular definite article and noun also translate into English as "pulpit," "teaching post," or "tenure" according to context. The pronunciation will be "la KAT-tey-dra" in Italian.
"Job posting"is one English equivalent of the Italian word borsino.Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine singular form of a noun. It means "dealing desk, job posting, trading desk". The pronunciation will be "bohr-SEE-noh" in Italian.
Scrivania is an Italian equivalent of the English word "desk".Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or follow the feminine singular indefinite article una ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "SKREE-vah-NEE-ah" in Italian.
In French, "desk" is masculine and is translated as "le bureau."
The English word is "desk".the desk
Mesa do professor is a Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "teacher's desk." The phrase may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular a since Portuguese employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation of "(the) desk of the teacher" will be "(a) MEY-zuh doo PRO-fes-soor" in Cariocan Brazilian and continental Portuguese.
Banco, cattedra, scrivania, and sportello are Italian equivalents of the English word "desk." Context makes clear whether the term designates a piece of furniture for students (case 1), teachers (example 2), offices and writing (instance 3), or information service centers (sample 4). The respective pronunciations will be "BAN-ko," KAT-tey-dra," SKREE-va-NEE-a," and "spor-TEL-lo" in Italian.
"not at desk" is translated "[je ne suis] pas au bureau" in French.
a desk
"My datebook" is an English equivalent of the French phrase mon agenda. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "my desk diary" in English. The pronunciation will be "mo-na-zheh-da" in French.
"A (one) datebook" and "a (one) desk diary" are English equivalents of the French phrase un agenda. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase will be "eh-na-zheh-da" in French.