"it" and "ita" are abbreviations for the word "Italian." The two abbreviations respectively illustrate the two-letter and three-letter International Organization for Standardization ISO 639 language codes. They also may be found elsewhere for abbreviations regarding Italy and the Italian language and people.
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'.
It is a common abbreviation for 'Italian'. It's based on the first two letters of the word. The two letters are the beginning letters for the word in a number of languages. So the abbreviation works under a number of situations, in a number of different languages.
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.
Italian 'work'. An abbreviation of 'opera in musica'.
"Dr." is an English equivalent of the Italian word Dott.ssa. The feminine singular noun in question serves as an abbreviation for Dottoressa ("female doctor"). The pronunciation will be "DOT-tsa" for the abbreviation and "DOT-to-RES-sa" for the full word in Italian.
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.
The abbreviation of de is d' usually used in French, Italian or Spanish when the next word begins with a vowel.
The Italian word for ounce used to be spelled 'onza', so 'oz.' is an abbreviation for this spelling.
Numéro ( actually a word borrowed from Italian) is abbreviated No.
The abbreviation used for million is MM. This abbreviation is frequently used within financial contexts. The word million itself is derived from early Italian.
"Mr." is an English equivalent of the Italian abbreviation Sig.Specifically, the abbreviation is short for signore. The word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It means "gentleman, mister, Mr., sir" according to context.The pronunciation will be "see-NYO-re" in Italian.
'opera' is Italian for 'work' and an abbreviation of 'opera in musica'.