"Stilo" is an Italian equivalent of the English word "style."
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "lo" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "STEE-loh."
"Italian style" in English means stile italiano in Italian.
Stile is an Italian equivalent of the English word "style"Specifically, the word is a masculine noun. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article lo ("the") or the masculing singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "STEE-ley" in Italian.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
"Dear little style" is one English equivalent of the Italian word stamino.Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It is formed from the combination of the masculine noun stame ("style") and the diminutive suffix -ino ("dear, little, small, sweet"). The pronunciation will be "sta-MEE-no" in Italian.
Di moda is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in style." The feminine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "of fashion (style, trend)" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee MO-da" in Italian.
"Style" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "stilo."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article "il" means "the." Its singular indefinite article "un, uno" means "a, one."The pronunciation is "STEE-loh."
"Magnificent" in English is magnifico in Italian.
"idee" is the Italian word for "ideas" but in the singular, the Italian word is the same as the English one. I mean English - Italian = idea - idea :) get it?
"Vey-LO-tchey"* is the pronunciation of the Italian word veloce. The feminine/masculine singular adjective translates into English as "fast, quick, rapid, swift."*Unlike English, Italian syllables end in vowels. The difference between saying "vey-LO-tchey" Italian-style and "vel-O-tchey" English-style immediately will give away the non-native speaker around native Italian-language speakers.
The Italian word vivo translates into the English word alive. The Italian word vivo also has the translation into the English word living or to live.
no he was English he wrote in an early style of modern English
In English, the Italian word "boca" translates to "mouth."