"School" is an English equivalent of the Italian word scuola. The feminine singular noun references both the educational institution and the subdivisions within colleges and universities. The pronunciation will be "SKWO-la" in Italian.
"School" in English is scuola in Italian.
"Why aren't you in school?" and Why aren't he (or she) in school?" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Perché non è a scuola? The pronunciation will be "per-KEY* no-neh a SKWO-la" in Italian. *The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Hey!"
Scuola means school.
"There's no school Saturday!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Il sabato, non c'è scuola! The declarative/exclamatory statement translates literally into English as "Saturday there is no school!" The pronunciation will be "eel SA-ba-to non tcheh SKWO-la" in Italian.
vado a scuola is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
'The [school] caretaker is well' is an English equivalent of 'Il bidello a scuola va bene'. In other situations, the Italian word 'bidello' may be translated as 'janitor' or 'usher'. But no matter the context, the word is pronounced 'bee-DEHL-loh'.
Scuola
A scuola is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in school".Specifically, the preposition a means "at, in". The feminine noun scuola translates as "school". The pronunciation will be "a SKWO-la" in Italian.
Amo la scuola! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love school!" The declaration translates literally as "I love the school" since Italian employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "A-mo la SKWO-la" in Pisan Italian.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
"Out" in English is fuori in Italian.
"About" in English is circa in Italian.