"Language" or "tongue" are English equivalents of the Italian word lingua.
Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. Its singular indefinite article lameans "the." Its singular indefinite article una means "a, one."
The pronunciation is "LEEN-gwah."
"Language" in English is lingua in Italian.
In Latin 'lingua' means language
Tongue or language.
"What language and...?" is an English equivalent of the incomplete Italian phrase Che lingua e...? The three-word question most often serves to start culture-, genealogy- and religion-related questions about first and second generation immigrant families. The pronunciation will be "key LEEN-gwa ey" in Pisan Italian.
Traduzione dall'italiano all'inglese is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italian to English translation." The prepositional phrase translates literally into English as "translation from the Italian to the English." The pronunciation will be "TRA-doo-TSYO-ney dal-LEE-ta-LYA-no al-leen-GLEY-zey" in Italian.
"But you know the Italian language" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ma tu sai la lingua italiana. The pronunciation will be "ma too seye la LEEN-gwa EE-ta-LYA-na" in Italian.
The English translation of the word dizionario is Italian for the word dictionary. While Italian is similar to Portuguese and Spanish, Italian words tend to use the letter z more.
Traduzione dall'inglese all'italiano is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "English to Italian translation." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "translation from the English to the Italian" in English. The pronunciation will be "TRA-doo-TSYO-ney dal-leen-GLEY-zey al-LEE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Lingua attuale is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "current language."Specifically, the feminine noun lingua means "language, tonguer." The feminine/masculine adjective attuale means "actual, current." The pronunciation is "LEEN-gwaht-TWAH-leh."
fatto
Il nome della lingua in italiano è "lingua" o "lingua italiana".
La lingua italiana and il linguaggio italianoare Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Italian language."Specifically, the feminine singular definite article laand the masculine il -- both of which may or may not be included in the English translation depending on context -- are "the." The feminine noun lingua and the masculine linguaggio respectively mean "language" in terms of conversation and of grammar. The feminine adjective italiana and the masculine italiano translate as "Italian."The respective pronunciations will be "la LEEN-gwa EE-ta-LYA-na" in the feminine and "eel leen-GWAD-djo EE-ta-LYA-no" in the masculine.