"KAH-roh NOH-mey KAY eel MEE-oh EH-koh REE-go-LEHT-toh" is the pronunciation of the incomplete Italian phrase Caro nome che il mio eco Rigoletto... .
Specifically, the masculine adjective caro is "dear, sweet". The masculine noun nome means "name". The conjunction che means "that, which, who, whom". The masculine singular definite article il means "the". The masculine possessive adjective mio means "my". The masculine noun eco means "echo". The masculine noun Rigolettoserves as a masculine proper noun.
The phrase is a variation on the title (Caro nome che il mio cor... , "Sweet name that my heart...") of an aria from the Opera Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi (1803-1901).
It is pronounced as "kah-roh NOH-meh keh eel MEE-oh EH-koh Ree-goh-LEH-toh."
"Caro amici" is Italian for "dear friends" or "beloved friends." It is a phrase used to address a group of people in a friendly and affectionate manner.
"Ciao caro" in Italian translates to "Hello dear" in English. It is a friendly and informal way to greet someone.
In Venice, you can say "caro" to address someone as "dear".
É muito caro = It's too expensive O preço é muito caro = The price is too expensive. Isto é muito caro. = This is too expensive.
Sono qui per aiutarti, cosa posso fare per te oggi?
"Dear husband" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase caro sposo.Specifically, the masculine adjective caro means "darling, dear, sweet". The masculine noun sposotranslates as "bridegroom, groom, husband". The pronunciation will be "KA-ro SPO-zo" in Italian.
"My dear!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Caro mio! The phrase may be said to a "beloved" or "darling" male since Cara mia! represents the feminine equivalent. The pronunciation will be "KA-ro MEE-o" in the masculine and "KA-ra MEE-a" in the feminine in Pisan Italian.
Caro uomo is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "dear man." The pronunciation of the masculine singular adjective and noun will be "KA-ro WO-mo" in Italian.
caro nome from rigoletto
"My dear beloved" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Caro mio ben. The masculine singular adjective, possessive, and noun most famously reference an arietta composed by both or one of two brothers, Giuseppe Tommaso Giovanni (December 19, 1751 - January 4, 1798) and Tommaso (1730 - February 24, 1836) Giordano. The pronunciation will be "KA-ro MEE-o ben" in Italian.
Beth ama il suo caro is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Beth loves her sweetheart." The pronunciation will be "beh-TA-ma eel SOO-o KA-ro" in Italian.
"Hello, dear!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ciao, caro! The greeting and masculine singular adjective/pronoun also translate into English as "Bye, beloved (darling, sweetheart, sweetheart)!" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tchow KA-ro" in Italian.
Buona sera, caro mio! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Good evening, my darling!" when said to a man. The pronunciation will be "BWO-na SEY-ra KA-ro MEE-o" in Italian.
My dear is an English equivalent of 'mio caro'. In the word by word translation, the possessive 'mio' means 'my'. The masculine adjective 'caro' means 'dear, beloved'. For a female, the Italian equivalents would be 'mia cara'. The phrase is pronounced 'MEE-oh KAH-roh'.
Mio caro uomo! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "My dear man!" The masculine singular phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") if the words are uttered about, not to, the dear male. The pronunciation will be "(eel) MEE-o KA-ro WO-mo" in Pisan Italian.
"Caro amici" is Italian for "dear friends" or "beloved friends." It is a phrase used to address a group of people in a friendly and affectionate manner.
Ciao, Caro in the masculine and Ciao, Cara in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Hello, Dear."Specifically, the greeting ciao means "hi, hello." The masculine adjective/pronoun caro and the feminine cara mean "dear." The pronunciation is "tchow* KAH-roh" in the masculine and "tchow KAH-rah" in the feminine.*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "chow."