Il tuo amico bello is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "your handsome friend".
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il is "the". The masculine possessive adjective tuomeans "(informal singular) your". The masculine noun amico means "(male) friend". The masculine adjective bello translates as "beautiful, handsome".
The pronunciation will be "eel TOO-oh ah-MEE-koh BEHL-loh" in Italian.
Il mio amico bello is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "my handsome friend".Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il is "the". The masculine possessive adjective miomeans "my". The masculine noun amico means "(male) friend". The masculine adjective bello translates as "beautiful, handsome".The pronunciation will be "eel MEE-oh ah-MEE-koh BEHL-loh" in Italian.
"Friend" is an English equivalent of the Italian word amico.Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun that means "(male) friend." The pronunciation is "ah-MEE-koh." The feminine equivalent, amica, means "(female) friend." The pronunciation is "ah-MEE-kah."
Amica sorella is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "sister friend".Specifically, the feminine noun amica means "(girl) friend". The feminine noun sorellatranslates as "sister". The pronunciation will be "a-MEE-ka so-REL-la" in Italian.
It translates to "goodbye my handsome friend" in English.
"To my cowboy friend" in English is al mio amico cowboyin Italian.
This is a phrase that is very close to "mi mejor amiga", which means "my best friend".
Amica is an Italian equivalent of the English word "(female) friend."Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article la means "the." Its singular indefinite article una means "a, one."The pronunciation is "ah-MEE-kah."
"Friend request" in English is richiesta di amicizia in Italian.
The English translation for "tomodachi" is friend. tomodachi is friend in Japanese.
"My friend" in English is amico mio in Italian.
si dispone di bel viso is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
"Hello, scoundrel!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ciao, mascalzone! The greeting and masculine singular noun also translate into English as "Hi, crook (rascal, scallywag)!" but in a currently perceived affectionately tolerant way. The pronunciation will be "tchow MA-skal-TSO-ney" in Italian.