"Firm" as an adjective and "sale" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word saldo. The masculine singular word in question also has the English meanings of "balance sheet (clearance, full payment)" as a noun and "resolute (steadfast, steady, valid, well-defined, well-founded) as an adjective. Either way, the pronunciation remains "SAL-do" in Italian.
"Money" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "soldi."
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun that means "coins, money." Its plural definite article is "i' ("the"). Its plural indefinite article is "dei" ("some").
The pronunciation is "SOHL-dee."
"Money" is one English equivalent of the Italian word soldi.
Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its plural form. It also may be translated as "cash, coins (of various value), funds, pay." The pronunciation will be "SOL-dee" in Italian.
"To sell money" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "vendere soldi."Specifically, the infinitive "vendere" means "to sell." The masculine noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "VEHN-deh-reh SOHL-dee."
"Much money" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "molti soldi."Specifically, the masculine plural adjective "molti" means "much." The masculine plural noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee."
Un sacco di soldi is Lots of money in Italian.
"Send me money" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "Mandami soldi."Specifically, the imperative "manda" means "(informal singular you) send." The object pronoun "mi" means "to me." The masculine noun "soldi" means "coins, money."The pronunciation is "MAHN-dah-mee-SOHL-dee."
Molti soldi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a lot of money".Specifically, the masculine adjective molti means "a lot of, lots, many". The masculine noun soldi translates as "coins, money". The pronunciation will be "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee" in Italian.
"Vendere soldi" is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to sell money."Specifically, the infinitive "vendere" means "to sell." The masculine noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "VEHN-deh-reh SOHL-dee."
"Give me the money!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "Dammi i soldi!"Specifically, the imperative "da" means "(informal singular you) give." The personal pronoun "mi" means "to me." The masculine plural definite article "i" means "the." The masculine plural noun "soldi" means "coins, money."The pronunciation is "DAHM-mee-SOHL-dee."
"Need for money" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase bisogno di soldi.Specifically, the masculine noun bisogno is "necessity, need". The preposition di literally means "of". The masculine noun soldi translates as "money".The pronunciation will be "bee-ZOH-nyoh dee SOHL-dee" in Italian.
"There's money for food" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Vi sono soldi per cibo.Specifically, the adverb vi is "there". The verb sono means "are". The masculine noun soldi means "cash, coins, funds, money". The preposition per means "for". The masculine noun cibo translates as "food".The pronunciation will be "vee SO-no SOL-dee per TCHEE-bo" in Italian.
Molti soldi and tanti soldi are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "big money." The speaker's birth place and personal preferences determine the choice, with the first option literally translating as "lots of money" and the second as "so much money" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "MOL-tee SOL-dee" and "TAN-tee SOL-dee" in Italian.
"Molti soldi" is an Italian equivalent of "much money."Specifically, the masculine plural adjective "molti" means "much." The masculine plural noun "soldi" means "coins, money." The pronunciation is "MOHL-tee SOHL-dee."
non ho soldi