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.
frutto
Cedro in Italian means "cedar," cedar fruit," or "cedar tree" in English.
Arancia and arancione are Italian equivalents of the English word "orange." Context makes clear whether the fruit (case 1) or the color (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "a-RAN-tcha" for the fruit and "A-ran-TCHO-ney" for the color 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.
if you're talking about fruit orange means jeruk but when you're talking about color it means "jingga/oranye" :)
Frutta fresca is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "fresh fruit." The feminine singular noun and adjective serve to illustrate a general rule in Italian grammar, whereby a modifier typically -- and most unlike English -- follows its noun. The pronunciation will be "FROOT-ta FREY-ska" in Italian.
It means, "orange:" the fruit.
Arance e limoni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "oranges and lemons." The first above-mentioned feminine plural noun refers only to the fruit whereas the second feminine plural noun -- after the conjunction -- references both the fruit and the lemon-yellow color. The pronunciation will be "a-RAN-tchey lee-MO-nee" in Italian.
Arancio conversationally and arancia as the fruit, arancio as the color or tree, and arancione as the color are Italian equivalents of the English word "color."Specifically, the masculine word arancio can be heard colloquially, conversationally, informally and locally to designate the color, fruit and tree. But historically the feminine noun arancia identifies the edible fruit of the orange tree. The masculine noun arancio indicates the orange tree (Citrus x sinensis) and oftentimes the color. The feminine/masculine adjective arancione properly refers to the color.The respective pronunciations in Italian will be "a-RAN-tcha" for the fruit, "a-RAN-tcho" for the color and tree, and "A-ran-TCHO-ney" for the color.
Dessert, dolci, and frutte are Italian equivalents of the English word "desserts." Context makes clear whether an English loan word (case 1), dessert sweets (example 1), or dessert fruits (instance 3) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "des-SER," "DOL-tchee," or "FROOT-tey" in Italian.
fuititos chlupas
Ciliegie is the Italian equivalent of 'cherries'. It's a feminine gender noun. The Italian equivalent of 'cherry pie' is 'torta di ciliegie', in which the feminine gender noun 'torta' means 'pie', and the preposition 'di' means 'from, of'.