In Italian, 'gentleman' becomes, 'deputato.'
The Italian word for no is no.
The Word for Hunter in Italian is a Cacciatore. The Word for Hunter in Italian is a Cacciatore.
a gentleman can be called "un gentilhomme" in French, but is is quite outdated and conveys the meaning of some nobility. The word gentleman is also used and understood by most French, with the same meaning it has in English.
The Italian word for ghost is fantasma.
The Italian word for sir is signore.
The way to address an Italian gentleman begins with the word Signore ("Sir") in Italian.
The word 'signor' is Italian for 'sir, mister, gentleman'. Its abbreviation in Italian is Sig. The word 'signora' is Italian for the title of 'Mrs' of 'Ms'. Its abbreviation is 'Sig.a'.
Sig. is the abbreviation for the Italian word signor. The masculine singular noun, which tends to be signor when followed by a name and signore when not, translates as "gentleman," "Mister," "Mr." and "sir" in English. The pronunciation will be "seeg" for the abbreviation and "see-NYO-rey" for the complete word in Pisan Italian.
Sig. is the abbreviation for the Italian word signore. The abbreviation translates into English as "Mr." since it shortens the masculine singular noun for "gentleman," "mister" or "sir." The pronunciation will be "see-NYO-rey" in Italian.
Gentleman is a compound word.
The word 'signor' is a shortened form of the word 'signore'. Both words are words in the Italian language. Either way, they mean sir, mister, gentleman.
"Signor" is an Italian term that means "mister" or "sir." In Spanish, the equivalent term is "señor."
Sig. is an Italian equivalent of the English word "Mr." The abbreviated title respectively stands for signore("gentleman," "mister," "Mr.," "sir") in Italian and "Mister" in English. The respective pronunciation will be "seeg" for the abbreviation and "see-NYO-rey" for the masculine singular noun in Pisan Italian.
The Word of a Gentleman was created in 1981.
It means a Spanish Gentleman. It derives from a Latin word Caballarius. It also passed into French as 'Cavalier' and into later Italian as Cavaliere
Signore is an Italian equivalent of the English word "Mister".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It means "gentleman, Mister, Mr., sir". The pronunciation will be "see-NYOH-rey" in Italian.Signore, pronounced, "Sin-your-re."
Of the gentleman is an English equivalent of 'Delsignore'. The word in Italian is pronounced 'dehl-see-NYOH-reh'. The name is formed by combining the preposition 'di' ['of'], the masculine definite article 'il' ['the'], and the masculine gender noun 'signore'['gentleman'].