tre linee
"Blue" in English is the three-letter word blu in Italian.
Italian. The word is derived from an ancient Greek word for bread.
tre pronounced "tray"
An Italian sonnet is made of 14 lines: two tercets (three lines each) and two quartains (4 lines each)
three, the word tri is italian.
Fra
No, the Italian word "tre" ("three") should not have an accent mark.Specifically, the word only has three letters. Two of the letters are consonants. What with just one vowel, no accent is needed for pronunciation or stress.
Tre is an Italian equivalent of the English word "three." As a cardinal adjective and noun, it possesses one form irrespective of the object or organism in question's gender. The pronunciation will be "trey" in Italian.
"A righe" is an Italian equivalent of the English word "striped."Specifically, the preposition "a" includes among its meanings "at, in, on, to." The feminine noun "righe" means "lines." The pronunciation is "ah REE-gheh."
An Italian Sonnet consists of 14 lines divided into an octet (8 lines) and a sestet (6 lines). The rhyme scheme for an Italian Sonnet is typically ABBAABBA for the octet and either CDCDCD or CDECDE for the sestet.
The Italian word for no is no.
"So" is an English equivalent of the Italian word così. The word in question also translates into English as "along these lines," "in this manner," "so much" or "thus" in its role as an adverb and as "although," so much that," or "therefore" in its role as a conjunction. Regardless of meaning or use, the word will be "ko-SEE" in Italian.