"Who?" is the question tag for the statement "The Italians love pasta." A statement which is phrased as "Italians love pasta" contrastingly may have the question tag "What?" The use and non-use of the definite article -- which often is discretionary and even not mandatory -- subtly serve to differentiate between the different tag and the resultingly different response.
Switzerlands main food is pasta because they love Italians
Pizza, lasagna, ravioli basically any pasta dish. Italians are renowned for their love of pasta dishes.
pasta, bolognase, cheese, Pizza italians love wine, and breakfasts are normally sweet. Fish and fowl are also big in Italy, but pasta probably is the biggest one.
Amo gli italiani! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love Italians!" The statement translates literally as "I love the Italians!" in English. The pronunciation will be "A-mo LYEE-ta-LYA-nee" in Pisan Italian.
This is not a question... this is a statement !
This is a statement not a question
This is a statement and not a question.
no they love u
Is this a question or a divisive statement of fact(question mark)
As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!
This site is for asking questions. "Love other people selflessly" is a statement, not a question.
Here are some good foods that we found: * Fiorentina beefsteak Baccalà alla Vicentina Lasagne Pasta e fagioli Pizza Spaghetti bolognese Fettuccine Alfredo Salsiccia Limoncello Veal osso buco Chicken cacciatore