Chair, desk, dictionary, paper, pencil, students, teacher, and textbook are eight (8) things in an Italian language-learning classroom. Twenty-first century classrooms may have audio-visual materials and native speakers.
Otto
The word "classroom" has eight phonemes: /k/ /l/ /æ/ /s/ /r/ /uː/ /m/.
Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.Eight hours of classroom contact for the semester.
"Eighty-eight" in English is ottantotto in Italian.
"Forty-eight" in English is quarantotto in Italian.
An eight letter word for an Italian dessert is tiramisu.As in "this tiramisu is delicious!"
"Twenty-eight" in English means ventotto in Italian.
Settantotto is an Italian equivalent of the English number "seventy-eight".Specifically, the number settanta means "seventy (70)". The number otto translates as "eight (8)". The pronunciation will be "SET-tan-TOT-to" in Italian.
Novantotto is an Italian equivalent of the English word "ninety-eight (98)." The pronunciation of the invariable noun -- which combines novanta ("ninety," "90") and otto("eight," "8") -- will be "NO-van-TOT-to" in Italian.
Otto is an Italian equivalent of 'eight'. It's the number that's preceded by 'sette' ['seven'] and followed by 'nove' ['nine']. It's pronounced 'OHT-toh'.
A Spider
"Fall down seven, get up eight" in English is Cadere sette volte, rialzarsi otto in Italian.