Lento or Lentamente may be Italian equivalents of 'slowly'. The word 'lento' also may function as the masculine form of an adjective. The feminine form is 'lenta'. The word 'lentamente' only functions as an adverb in an Italian sentence. The two words are pronounced 'LEHN-toh' and 'LEHN-tah-MEHN-tay', respectively.
Lentamente in Italian means "slowly" in English.
Lentamente is an Italian equivalent of the English word "slowly." The adverb most famously refers to a musical direction. The pronunciation will be "LEN-ta-MEN-tey" in Pisan Italian.
Piano is Italian for "slowly," and in music "quietly."
Piano in Italian is "even" as an adjective, "floor," "piano" or "plan" as a noun, "quiet" or "slow" as an adjective, and "quietly" or "slowly" as an adverb in Italian.
adagio means "slowly" or "gently"
Parla lentamente, più lento.
'un piano' is the French spelling. The word 'piano' itself means 'slowly' in Italian.
The Italian musical term morendo indicates a decrease in volume or tempo, but often affects both; to make the sound slowly die away.
more slowly, most slowlymore slowly, most slowly
Before the formation of the Roman Empire the population of Rome had to deal with their close neighbors on the Italian Peninsula, mainly the Etruscans, but most Latin tribes slowly assimilated with the Roman culture.
"Little by little, love" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Pian pianino, amore.Specifically, the masculine adjective pian, piano* means "gently, slowly, softly, steadily." The diminutive pianino means "quite, very gently, slowly, softly, steadily." The masculine noun amore means "love."The pronunciation is "pyahn pyah-NEE-noh ah-MOH-reh."*The vowel may drop when a word is repeated and when that word begins with a consonant.
more slowly, most slowly