Numeri da undici a venti is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "numbers from 11 to 20. The phrase 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 "(ee) NOO-mey-ree da OON-dee-tchee a VEN-tee" in Pisan Italian.
Numeri da undici a ventidue is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "numbers from 11 to 20." The phrase 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 "(ee) NOO-mey-ree da OON-dee-tchee a VEN-tee-DOO-ey" in Pisan Italian.
Undici is an Italian equivalent of the English number "eleven (11)." The number merges uno ("one") with dieci ("ten"). The pronunciation will be "OON-dee-tchee" in Pisan Italian.
The numbers "1 to 30" when translated from English to Italian are the following:1. uno; 2. due; 3. tre ; 4. quattro; 5. cinque; 6. sei; 7. sette; 8. otto; 9. nove; 10. dieci; 11. undici; 12. dodici; 13. tredici; 14. quattordici; 15. quindici; 16. seidici; 17. diciassette; 18. diciotto;19. diciannove; 20. venti; 21. ventuno; 22. ventidue; 23. ventitre; 24. ventiquattro; 25. venticinque; 26. ventisei; 27. ventisette; 28. ventotto; 29. ventinove; 30. trenta.
"Today is Monday, May 11" in English is Aujourd'hui on est lundi le onze mai in French.
In Italian, the name 'Phillip' is translated as 'Filippo.' This translation maintains the same phonetic sounds as the original English name but follows the Italian language's spelling conventions. Additionally, the 'ph' sound in English is often replaced with 'f' in Italian, hence the change from 'Phillip' to 'Filippo.'
The Italian numbers from 0-20 are the following: zero(0), uno (1), due (2), tre (3), quattro(4), cinque (5), sei (6), sette (7), otto (8), nove (9), dieci (10), undici(11), dodici (12), tredici (13), quattordici(14), quindici (15), sedici (16), diciassette(17), diciotto (18), diciannove (19), venti(20).
Ho undici anni! and Io sono un undicenne! or Sono un'undicenne! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I am eleven!" Context makes clear whether "I have 11 years" (case 1) or the feminine (example 3) or the masculine "I'm an eleven-year-old!" (instance 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "o OON-dee-tchee AN-nee," "EE-o SO-no oo-NOON-dee-TCHEN-ney" and "SO-no oo-NOON-dee-TCHEN-ney" in Pisan Italian.
South Africa has 11 official languages. It is necessary to state which South African language you would like the words translated into.
elf is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.
Francesco Petrarca is the Italian poet with whom Thomas Wyatt acquainted England's readers by circulating English translations and imitating Petrarchan styles. The Italian poet in question (July 20, 1304 - July 19, 1374) still makes Italian language-learners out of poetry-lovers. The English poet in question (1503 - October 11, 1542) likewise manages to attract twenty-first century lovers of poetry through his Petrarch-style sonnets.
Antonio tuvo que recibir once puntos en su mejilla.
Uno, due, tre, quattro, cinque, sei, sette, otto, nove, dieci are the Italian equivalents of the English numbers from one (1) to ten (10). "OO-no," "DOO-ey," "trey," "KWAT-tro," "TCHEEN-kwey," "sey," "SET-tey," "OT-to," "NO-vey," DYEH-tchee" are their respective pronunciations. Undici, dodici, tredici, quattordici, quindici, sedici, diciassette, diciotto, diciannove, venti are the Italian equivalents of the English numbers from eleven (11) to twenty (20). "OON-dee-tchee," "DO-dee-tchee," "TREY-dee-tchee," "kwat-TOR-dee-tchee," "KWEEN-dee-tchee," "SEY-dee-tchee," "DEE-tchas-SET-tey," "dee-TCHOT-to," "DEE-tchan-NO-vey," VEN-tee" are their respective pronunciations.Ventuno, ventidue, ventritre, ventiquattro, venticinque, ventisei, ventisette, ventotto, ventinove, trenta are the Italian equivalents of the English numbers from twenty-one (21) to thirty (30). "Ven-TOO-no," "VEN-tee-DOO-ey," "VEN-tee-trey," "VEN-tee-KWAT-tro," "VEN-tee-TCHEEN-kwey," "VEN-tee-sey," "VEN-tee-SET-tey," "ven-TOT-to," "VEN-tee-NO-vey," "TREN-ta" are their respective pronunciations.