Bowls and lawn bowls are Italian equivalents of the English word "(game of) bowls".
Specifically, the two possibilities function as English loan words in Italian. Each one is considered a masculine noun. Each one showcases just one form regardless of whether it is a question of one or more games.
"Bowls" is an English equivalent of the Italian word bocce.Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun that refers to the game that retired men often are seen playing in parks. The word may be preceded by the definite article le ("the") or the indefinite delle ("some"). The pronunciation is "BOHT-tcheh."
If the language is Italian, you may have confused two words. Baci is the word for kisses and bocce is a popular Italian lawn game.
partita
"Games" in English is giochi in Italian.
"Card game" in English is gioco di carte in Italian.
Jeu damour is a French term. The English translation of Jeu is 'game', and the translation of 'damour' is 'love'. So Jeu damour means, in English, 'game of love'.
Gioco concluso! is an Italian equivaelnt of the English phrase "Game over!" The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "Game concluded!" in English. The pronunciation will be "DKO-ko kon-KLOO-zo" in Pisan Italian.
"ce jeu" -- "this game" or "that game"
Craps is an English loan word in Italian.Specifically, the word refers to a dice-playing game. The English term is thought to trace back to the French word crapaud for toad because of the toad-like position that players may assume. In Italian, the loan word is a masculine noun whose definite article il means "the."
Videogioco is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "video game." The masculine singular noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il since Italian employs "the" where English does and does not. The pronunciation will be "VEE-dey-o-DJO-ko" in Italian.
Game of Bowls was created in 1908.
"A set of three winning numbers" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word terno.Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun whose meanings extend to "guessing game" or "jackpot" depending upon the context. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the indefinite un ("a, one"). The pronunciation is "TEHR-noh."