"Grass snake" is an English equivalent of "biscia dal collare" (Natrix natrix).
The Italian word "biscia" is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."
All together, the pronunciation is "BEE-shah dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
"Grass snake" is an English equivalent of "natrice dal collare" (Natrix natrix).
The Italian word "natrice" is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."
All together, the pronunciation is "nah-TREE-tcheh dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
"Biscia dal collare" or "natrice dal collare" may be Italian equivalents of "ringed snake" (Natrix natrix).The Italian words "biscia" and "natrice" are feminine nouns. Their singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and their singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."The respective pronunciations are "BEE-shah dahl kohl-LAH-reh" and "nah-TREE-tcheh dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
"Biscia dal collare" or "natrice dal collare" may be Italian equivalents of "grass snake" (Natrix natrix).The Italian words "biscia" and "natrice" are feminine nouns. Their singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and their singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."The respective pronunciations are "BEE-shah dahl kohl-LAH-reh" and "nah-TREE-tcheh dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
"Biscia dal collare" or "natrice dal collare" may be Italian equivalents of "water snake" (Natrix natrix).The Italian words "biscia" and "natrice" are feminine nouns. Their singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and their singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."The respective pronunciations are "BEE-shah dahl kohl-LAH-reh" and "nah-TREE-tcheh dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
E dal... in Italian means "And from the..." in English.
"From the..." is an English equivalent of the Italian word dal. The word merges the preposition da ("from") with the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The pronunciation will be "dal" in Italian.
Dal primo all'ultimo in Italian means "from beginning to end" in English.
Calcio italiano dal 1910 in Italian is "Italian football since 1910" in English.
Dal profondo means from deep. Dal profondo is Italian meaning- from deep.
Casa dal cuore is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "home from the heart." The pronunciation will be "KA-sa dal KWO-rey" in Italian.
Dal tuo ragazzo,or, alternatively dal tuo fidanzato.
Se lo so dal tuo bacio in Italian means "I know you by your kiss" in English.
"From the heart" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase dal cuore. The masculine singular prepositional phrase may be found most frequently in conversations regarding speaking directly, emotionally, honestly. The pronunciation will be "dal KWO-rey" in Italian.