"Cart" or "car" are English equivalents of the Italian word carro.
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular indefinite article is il ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "KAHR-roh."
Carro is an Italian equivalent of the English word "cart."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular indefinite article is il ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").The pronunciation is "KAHR-roh."
The car is an English equivalent of 'il carro'. The masculine definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine noun 'carro' means 'car'. Together, they're pronounced 'eel KAHR-roh'.
"Car computer" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase computadora para carro. The phrase translates literally as "computer for car" in English. The pronunciation will be "kom-POO-ta-THO-ra PA-ra KAR-ro" in Uruguayan Spanish.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
The Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'car' is the following: o automovel; or o carro. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: oo ow*-too-MAW-vehl; and oo KAH-hoo. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'o' means 'the'; 'automovel' and 'carro' 'car'. *The sound is like the 'ow' in the English word 'how'.
One Spanish word containing "rr" is "carro," which means "car" in English.
Carro armato for "armed tank," cisterna for "cistern," and serbatoio for "reservoir" are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "tank." The masculine singular noun and adjective literally means "armed car." The respective pronunciations will be "KAR-ro ar-MA-to," "tchee-STER-na," and SER-ba-TO-yo" in Italian.
"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?
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.
In English, the Italian word "boca" translates to "mouth."
The Italian word Vino represents the word wine in the English language. The word is a masculine singular noun. It is an Italian word used in the Italian language.