eseguire su di stile barca
"Italian style" in English means stile italiano in Italian.
Di moda is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in style." The feminine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "of fashion (style, trend)" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee MO-da" in Italian.
Amore stilo italiano is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "love Italian style."Specifically, the masculine noun amore is "love." The masculine noun stilo means "style." The masculine adjective italiano translates as "Italian."The pronunciation will be "a-MO-rey STEE-lo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Stile di vita is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "way of life." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "style of life" in English. The pronunciation will be "STEE-ley dee VEE-ta" in Italian.
Buon stile is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phase "good style." The masculine singular adjective and noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il("the") or indefinite un ("a," "an"). The pronunciation will be "bwon STEE-ley" in Italian.
"Dear little style" is one English equivalent of the Italian word stamino.Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It is formed from the combination of the masculine noun stame ("style") and the diminutive suffix -ino ("dear, little, small, sweet"). The pronunciation will be "sta-MEE-no" in Italian.
Classi is an Italian equivalent of the English word "classes." The feminine plural noun translates as "class" in the sense of an academic or social class or in terms of classroom, graduating class, scientific category and style. The pronunciation will be "KLA-see" in Pisan Italian.
no he was English he wrote in an early style of modern English
"But not too much and in a singing style" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ma non troppo e molto cantabile. The pronunciation will be "ma non TROP-po ey MOL-to kan-TA-bee-ley" in Italian.
"Stilo" is an Italian equivalent of the English word "style."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "lo" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "STEE-loh."
You may say 'sutairu,' written: スタイル
"Parmesan tripe" and "Tripe (with) Parmesan (cheese)" are English equivalents of the Italian feminine singular phrase Trippa alla parmigiana. The pronunciation of the cheese-stewed beef or veal stomach lining dish typical of cucina povera (peasant-style cooking, "poor cooking") will be "TREEP-pal-la PAR-mee-DJA-na" in Italian.