Arancione
l'arancia
Succo d'arancia is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "orange juice." The phrase translates literally as "juice of orange" in English. The pronunciation will be "SOOK-ko da-RAN-tcha" in Pisan Italian.
arancione
Arancione in Italian means "(the color) orange" in English.
Righe arancioni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "orange stripes." The feminine plural phrase also translates literally as "straight orange lines" in English. The pronunciation will be "REE-gey A-ran-TCHO-nee" in Pisan Italian.
Arancia fresca! and Arancione mitico! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Cool orange!" Context makes clear whether "Fresh orange (fruit)!" (case 1) or "Mythical orange (color)!" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "a-RAN-tcha FREY-ska" and "A-ran-TCHO-ney MEE-tee-ko" in Pisan Italian.
Some common translations for "orange" in different languages are: Spanish: naranja French: orange Italian: arancione German: orange Mandarin Chinese: 橙色 (chéngsè)
Apple - Manzana (Spanish), Pomme (French), Apfel (German), Mela (Italian), Ringo (Japanese) Banana - Plátano (Spanish), Banane (French), Banane (German), Banana (Italian), Banana (Japanese) Orange - Naranja (Spanish), Orange (French), Orange (German), Arancia (Italian), Orenji (Japanese) Grape - Uva (Spanish), Raisin (French), Traube (German), Uva (Italian), Budo (Japanese) Strawberry - Fresa (Spanish), Fraise (French), Erdbeere (German), Fragola (Italian), Ichigo (Japanese)
No, Garibaldi was a Italian Genral a long time ago. His men wore bright orange shirts. No, Garibaldi was a Italian Genral a long time ago. His men wore bright orange shirts.
Frutta arancione and frutta di colore arancioneare Italian equivalents of the English phrase "orange fruit." Birthplace and personal preference determine whether "orange fruit" (case 1) or "fruit of orange color" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "FROOT-ta-ran-TCHO-ney" and "FROOT-ta dee ko-LO-rey A-ran-TCHO-ney" in Pisan Italian.
Aranciera is an Italian equivalent of the English word "orangery," a hothouse for orange trees. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun will be "A-ran-TCHEY-ra" in Italian.
Yes they do have expiration dates it could be underneath