Il trecento is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the fourteenth century".
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il means "the". The masculine noun trecento literally translates as "three hundred (300)" since the years in the 14th century number in the 1300s. The pronunciation will be "eel trey-TCHEHN-toh" in Italian.
"Fourteenth century" in English is quattordicesimo secoloin Italian.
Francesco Landini
The work unkept comes to us from the Middle English of the Fourteenth century.The work unkept comes to us from the Middle English of the Fourteenth century.The work unkept comes to us from the Middle English of the Fourteenth century.The work unkept comes to us from the Middle English of the Fourteenth century.
Robin Healey has written: 'Family and social change in a South Italian town' -- subject(s): Family, Social conditions 'Twentieth-century Italian literature in English translation' -- subject(s): Bibliography, English imprints, Italian literature, Translations into English
The word magic started being used in English in the fourteenth century. It comes from the plural word magi that started much earlier in English in the thirteenth century.
Gemma is an Italian name meaning "jewel".It has been used since at least the fourteenth century.
Italian humanists of the fourteenth century believed in the importance of studying classical texts to understand human nature and improve society. They emphasized the value of education, critical thinking, and the development of individual talents. Additionally, they promoted a more secular and human-centered approach to learning and culture.
Brenton's English Translation of the Septuagint was created in 1851.
The language spoken in England in the fourteenth century was Middle English. It was the transitional stage between Old English and Modern English, characterized by the influence of French and Latin due to the Norman Conquest in 1066. Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" is a famous work written in Middle English.
Herbert Bruce has written: 'English history in contemporary poetry' 'The fourteenth century'
Barocca in the feminine and barocco in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "baroque".Specifically, the Italian words are adjectives in their singular forms. They refer to the "elaborate, extravagant, ornate" artistic style which is associated with seventeenth-century Europe. The pronunciations will be "ba-ROK-ka" in the feminine and "ba-ROK-ko" in the masculine.
15th