"Pranziamo!" is just one (1) Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Let's eat lunch!"
Specifically, the Italian verb is the first person plural form of the present imperative of the infinitive "pranzare" ("to have lunch, to lunch"). It also is the form for the same person in the present indicative ("We have lunch") and the present subjunctive ("[That] we may have lunch").
But regardless of the translation or use, the pronunciation remains the same: "prahn-TSYAH-moh."
"ഞാൻ ലഞ്ച് നേടണോ" (Njan lunch nāṭaṇō) would be the closest translation for "Let's go for lunch" in Malayalam.
Chotto lets dake
tengamos una cerveza
There are 4. Before Lets, after lunch, before I'm and after hungry
Laß uns zu Mittag essen
lets stop at the heliport first before lunch
"The goddess" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase la dea.Specifically, the feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine noun dea means "goddess." The pronunciation is "lah DEH-ah."
it means: for my beautiful
come to me. lets emabrase
it usually means lets fight then..
The company only lets employees take a 30-minute lunch break.
The Italian language is said to have over 250000 words, take into a account their English translations and the average lengh of a definition (lets say 20) that would make over 10 million words DISPLAYED in the dictionary. The translated amount would of course be more or less a quarter of a million.