'Tcheh' is the sound that the letters 'ce' make in Italian. It doesn't matter what word they're part of. It doesn't matter where they're found within the word: beginning, middle or end. The sound always is the same.
Words that produce the "sh" sound with the letters "ce" include "certain," "ceremony," and "cereal." In these examples, the "ce" combination is pronounced as "sh." This phonetic occurrence is less common but appears in specific words in English.
The CE make the S sound but are silent
Non ce la faccio più! in Italian means "I can't take this any longer!" in English.
Words with Ce that sound like Sh:oceansebaceouscretaceouscurvaceouscarbonaceous
Celt has the k sound. Celery has the s sound.
The words est-ce are French and translate into English as the words is this. These words translate into Italian as e questo.
Greenpeace.
Cease, ceasefire, cedar, celebrant, celebrity, celebration, celery and cello are words. They begin with the letters ce.
ok a quick Italian learning lesson 1. when a word in Italian has a 'c' next to any letter it is pronounced 'ch'. e.g. Dulce is Dull-Ch-eh its takes alot of practice to speak Italian and make sure u get the 'ce' part of Dulce correct
"Ce" in terms of place and time and "lì" in terms of place are just two (2) of the many Italian equivalents to the English word "there."Specifically, both Italian equivalents are adverbs. The adverb "ce" often loses the vowel "e" before a word that begins with a vowel. In such a case, the dropped vowel is replaced by an apostrophe: "ce era" is written "c'era" ("there was").The respective pronunciations are "tcheh" and "lee."
CE means "Common Era", a substitute for A.D. Common Era refers to our calendar that began after Jesus birth.
The Italian phrase 'ce posta per te' means 'you have got mail'. One can easily translate such simple phrases manually by visiting the website translate dot google dot com.