'Figli' is an Italian equivalent of 'sons'. It's a masculine noun whose plural definite article is 'i' ['the'] and whose plural indefinite article is 'dei' ['some']. It's pronounced 'FEE-lyee'.
"Sons of Italy" in English means Figli dell'Italia in Italian.
In Flemish, you would say "mijn zonen" to mean "my sons."
Sotto is how you say under in Italian.
"Ristoranti" is what we say it in Italian!!
I miei figli is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "my sons."Specifically, the masculine plural definite article imeans "the." The masculine possessive adjective miei means "my." The masculine noun figli means "sons."The pronunciation is "ee myeh FEE-lyee."
in italiano
"You are learning Italian" = "Stai imparando Italiano""I am learning Italian" = "Sto imparando Italiano"
YesThe son and his sister = 1 son, 1 sisterThe sons and their sister = many sons, 1 sisterThe son and his sisters = 1 son, many sistersThe sons and their sisters = many sons, many sistersThough in reality this is a strange way to say it. More normal would be "The sons and daughters".
You can say "the street" in Italian as "la strada."
Encore is Italian.
To say fake in Italian you say finto.
Italian marita(italian)=Italian marries(english)