Vittorio Veneto Street is an English equivalent of the Italian place name Via (Vittorio) Veneto.
Specifically, the feminine noun via means "street, way." The street honors the Italian victory in the battle of Vittorio Veneto of October 24-November 3, 1918. That victory led to the end of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and of the First World War. The historic city is located in the northeast part of Italy, in the region of the former Venetian Republic.
The pronunciation is "VEE-ah (veet-TOH-ryoh) VEH-neh-toh."
The Via Veneto Papers was created in 1992.
The ISBN of The Via Veneto Papers is 0910395675.
The Via Veneto Papers has 251 pages.
"Street" in English is via in Italian.
In Italian, "via" is the approximate English translation of "road," so you could say "Via Giovanni I" translates as "Road [of] Giovanni I", and "Via Tavola" translates as "Road [of the] Table," or even "Table Road.""Via" also means "away," so you could say "Vai via!" which means "Go away!" or "Via di qui!" which means "Away from here!"
The dogs are in the street.
The slaves are in the street
via
go with god
"The beautiful path" is one English equivalent of the Italian phrase la via bella. Specifically, the feminine singular definite article la is "the". The feminine noun via means "path, road, way". The feminine adjective bella translates as "beautiful". The pronunciation will be "la VEE-a BEL-la" in Italian.
Someone can find an English to Welsh translation dictionary via a number of websites. One can find such a dictionary on sites such as 'Free Translation', 'Stars21' and 'ImTranslator'.
Le persone sempre vanno via