Ore aperte literally and porte aperte commonly are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "open hours." The feminine singular nouns and adjectives literally mean "hours open" in the first example and "doors open" in the second. The respective pronunciations will be "O-rey a-PER-tey" and "POR-tey a-PER-tey" in Italian.
"Find your stage door and open it!" in English is Trovare il palcoscenico e aprirlo! in Italian.
Key (for open doors): Chiave [Kee-ave] Key (of the keyboard): Tasto
The singular aperta and the plural aperte in the feminine and the singular aperto and the plural aperti in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "open." The choice depends upon the gender and number of what or who is open. The respective pronunciations will be "a-PER-ta" and "a-PER-tey" in the feminine and "a-PER-to" and "a-PER-tee" in the masculine in Italian.
aprire le porte dell'inferno is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
"Are you open today?" in English means ¿Está abierto hoy?in Spanish.
It means "open".
Due cuochi is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "two chefs." The feminine/masculine plural number and masculine plural noun most currently reference a restaurant -- open since 2005 -- in São Paulo, Brazil. The pronunciation will be "DOO-ey KWO-kee" in Italian.
Translation: No abras hasta...
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. How can I open my msn?
"Square" is an English equivalent of the Italian word piazza.Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine indefinite article una ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "PYAHT-tsah" in Italian.
The singular aperta e vicina and the plural aperte e vicine in the feminine and the singular aperto e vicinoand the plural aperti e vicini in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "open and close." Context makes clear which option suits for the descriptive phrase whose alternative translation is "open and nearby" in English.The respective pronunciations will be "a-PER-ta ey vee-TCHEE-na" or "a-PER-tey vee-TCHEE-ney" in the feminine and "a-PER-to ey vee-TCHEE-no" or "a-PER-tee ey vee-TCHEE-nee" in the masculine in Italian.
Pane poroso is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "open-textured bread." The masculine singular phrase references such internal air pocket-friendly, open-crumb breads as:ciabatta ("slipper-bread");pane casalingo ("household bread");pane di semola ("semolina bread");pane toscano ("Tuscan bread").The respective pronunciations will be "PA-ney po-RO-zo," "tcha-BAT-ta," "PA-ney KA-za-LEEN-go," "PA-ney dee SEY-mo-la," and "PA-ney to-SKA-no" in Italian.