Uno, due e tre! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "One, two and three!"
Specifically, the masculine number uno is "one (1)." The masculine/feminine number due means "two (2)." The conjunction e means "and." The feminine/masculine number tre translates as "three (3)."
The pronunciation will be "OO-no, DOO-ey, trey" in Italian.
There is no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has four official languages: 1. German 2. Italian 3. French 4. Romansch
There is no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has four official languages: 1. German 2. Italian 3. French 4. Romansch
There is no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has four official languages: 1. German 2. Italian 3. French 4. Romansch
There is no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has four official languages: 1. German 2. Italian 3. French 4. Romansch
There is actually no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has 4 official languages: 1. German 2. French 3. Italian 4. Romansh
Cosa hai detto? or Cosa avete detto? and Puoi ripetere? or Potete ripetere? are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "What did you say?" Context makes clear whether one "you" (cases 1, 3) or two or more "you all" (examples 2, 4) suits for "What did you say?" (instances 1, 2) and, for options 3 and 4, "Can you repeat (that)?" The respective pronunciations will be "KO-seye DET-to" or "KO-sa-VEY-tey DET-to" and "pwoy ree-PEH-tey-rey" or "po-TEY-tey ree-PEH-tey-rey" in Pisan Italian.
Example: a - b = b-a, So lets say a=2 b=3. 2-3=3-2 -1 =/= 1
(2/3) * (3/2) = 1
I'd say 3 or 2and 1/2 what ever you believe is right.
The Italian American Cook - 2014 Grilled Sausage with Summer Salad 2-1 was released on: USA: 3 March 2014
Let's say we have the addition problem 1 + 2 = 3 1 and 2 are the addends. 3 is the sum.
That depends on what you mean by "and". I'm guessing that what you mean is "by", as in "How do you divide 1/3 by 1/2". This can be easily done by remembering one simple rule: Dividing by a fraction is identical to multiplying by the inverse of that fraction. In this case then, dividing by 1/2 is identical to multiplying by 2/1. So we can say: 1/3 ÷ 1/2 = 1/3 × 2/1 = (1 × 2)/(3 × 1) = 2/3