Gabinetto Vieusseux was created in 1819.
Gaspard Vieusseux was born in 1746.
Gaspard Vieusseux died in 1814.
The cast of Il gabinetto n. 13 - 1915 includes: Armand Pouget Eleuterio Rodolfi Ersilia Scalpellini
Luigi Parigi has written: 'I disegni musicali del Gabinetto degli \\' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Drawing, Gabinetto disegni e stampe degli Uffizi, Music in art
"Where's the bathroom?" or "Where is the bathroom?" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Dov'è il gabinetto?Specifically, the adverb dove* means "where." The verb è means "(He/she/it) is, (formal singular you) are." The masculine singular definite article il means "the." The masculine noun gabinetto means "public toilet." The pronunciation is "DOH-vehl GAH-bee-NEHT-toh."*The final vowel e drops before the verb . The temporary nature of the drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the last letter in the adverb and immediately before the verb.
Meningitis was first described in the 1020s in Avicenna's The Canon of Medicine, and again more accurately by Avenzoar of al-Andalus in the 12th century. Symptoms of the disease were also noted in 1805 by the Swiss Gabinetto Vieusseux (a scientific-literary association) during an outbreak in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1887, Dr. Anton Weichselbaum (1845-1920) of Vienna became the first to isolate the specific germ, meningococcus.
"Your toilet did not overflow today!" in English is Il tuo gabinetto non ha fatto troppopieno oggi! in Italian.
Francesco Selmin has written: 'Storia del Gabinetto di lettura di Este, 1847-1997' 'Il poeta vagabondo' -- subject(s): Biography, Italian Poets
Marzia Faietti has written: 'Figure, memorie, spazio' -- subject(s): Exhibitions, Gabinetto disegni e stampe degli Uffizi, Influence, Drawing, Renaissance Drawing, Italian Drawing
Giulia Fusconi has written: 'I paesaggi di Nicolas-Didier Boguet e i luoghi tibulliani' -- subject(s): Exhibitions, Gabinetto nazionale delle stampe, Rome (Italy : Province) in art
Necessiti il gabinetto is one of many Italian equivalents of 'Do you need the toilet'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'necessiti' means '[you] are needing, do need, need'. The masculine definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'gabinetto' means 'water closet'. The phrase is pronounced 'neh-cheh-SEE-tee eel gah-bee-NET-toh'.Another person of the verb is used if the listener is senior in age or position to the speaker. That form is 'necessita', which involves the 'formal you' as opposed to the 'informal you' above. It's pronounced 'neh-cheh-SEE-tah'.
Lavatoio is an Italian equivalent of 'lavatory'. It's a masculine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'il' ['the'] and as its indefinite 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'lah-vah-TOY-oh'.Other equivalents are 'gabinetto' and 'ritirata'. The masculine gender noun 'gabinetto' literally refers to a 'small room' that may be used as a closet, a consulting office, or a lavatory. It's pronounced 'gah-bee-NEHT-toh'. The feminine gender noun 'ritirata' takes as its definite article 'la' ['the'] and as its indefinite article 'una' ['a, one']. It literally means 'retreat', and is pronounced 'ree-tee-RAH-tah'.