Legno is an Italian equivalent of 'wood'. It's pronounced 'LEH-nyoh'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one'].
If the 'wood' is used in fires, then another word is used in Italian. It's 'legna', which is pronounced 'LEH-nyah'. It's a feminine gender noun whose definite article is 'la' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'una' ['a, one'].
No, adobe is not an Italian word that means "wood."Specifically, legno is the Italian equivalent of "wood." Its singular definite article il means "the." The pronunciation is "LEH-nyoh."
legno
viola
Gnocchi
scatola di legno
colla per legno
Bosco as the small forest and legno as the material or product are Italian equivalents of the English word "wood." Context makes clear which option suits. The respective pronunciations will be "BO-sko" and "LEY-nyo" in Italian.
everyday objects and italian 16th century lace
Bruno Mattei went by The Italian Ed Wood.
"Oak" is an English equivalent of the Italian word quercia. The feminine singular noun refers to both the tree and the wood. The pronunciation will be "KWER-tcha" in Pisan Italian.
Col legno in Italian means "with the wood" in English. In making music with a stringed instrument, it means either to strike the wood of the bow (the back) on the strings or to pull it across like the hair of the bow.
James Wood Brown has written: 'Italian architecture' 'The Dominican church of Santa Maria Novella at Florence'