Pittura is an Italian equivalent of 'paint'. It's a feminine gender noun that takes 'la' ['the'] as its definite article and 'una' ['a, one'] as its indefinite. It's pronounced 'peet-TOO-rah'.
Dipingere is an equivalent of 'to paint', in the artistic sense. It's an infinitive that's pronounced 'dee-PEEN-jeh-ray'. When 'to paint' means 'to cover with a coat of paint', as in painting ceilings and walls, the verb is pitturare, which is pronounced 'peet-too-RAH-ray'.
di pinti.
Italian people paint there rooms all different colours because the havedifferent personalizes and think that it looks right to them.
Patina in Italian means "coat," "glaze," or "wash (of paint)" in English.
He is Italian High Renaissance.
He was part of the Italian High Renaissance.
It is an example of Early Italian Renaissance.
Giotto di Bondone
To create layers of paint that reflected light
Belli cavalli pezzati is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful paint horses." The pronunciation of the masculine plural adjective, noun, and adjective/past participle -- which translate by word order as "beautiful horses painted" -- will be "BEL-lee ka-VAL-lee pet-TSA-tee" in Italian.
Dipingere la camera is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to paint the room."Specifically, the infinitive dipingere means "to pain." The feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine noun camera means "room."The pronunciation is "dee-PEEN-djeh-reh eel KAH-meh-rah."
me an Italian oldy thats who i paint yeah inapropperet photos so yeah come to 55 rhubarb road Italy
The answer is GESSO, which is a base or primer used in painting.