Il beato or Il benedetto is an Italian equivalent of 'blessed one'. The pronunciation is 'eel bay*-AH-toh' or 'eel bay*-nay*-DAY*-toh'. In the word by word translation, the definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine adjectives 'beato' and 'benedetto' mean 'blessed'. The equivalents in regard to a blessed female or feminine object is 'la beata' or 'la benedetta'.
*The sound 'ay' is similar to the sound 'ay' in the English noun 'ray'.
Lucky is "avoir de la chance" in French.
"Not lucky" in English is sfortunato in Italian.
"Lucky woman!" in English is Donna fortunata! in Italian.
"Fortunate" is an English equivalent of the Italian word fortunato. The masculine singular adjective also translates into English as "lucky." The pronunciation will be "FOR-too-NA-to" in Italian.
Fortunato
Fartun means the lucky one, it's a female Somali name that drives from the Italian word Fartunato, given the Somali-Italian history. I hope this helped!
Here are translations for the word "lucky" in a few languages: Spanish: afortunado French: chanceux/chanceuse German: glücklich Italian: fortunato/fortunata Japanese: 幸運な (kōunna) Russian: удачливый (udachlivy)
"Here comes the lucky groom!" in English is Viene qui lo sposo fortunato! in Italian.
There is no word for "lucky" in the Bible.
The Italian word for no is no.
The word 'Lucky' (capital L) is a noun, a proper noun; a common name for a pet or the nickname of a person.The word 'lucky' (lower case l) is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a lucky penny, a luckybreak, a lucky guess, etc.)
No, the word 'lucky' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.Example: I'm wearing my lucky socks.The noun form of the adjective 'lucky' is luckiness.The word 'lucky' is the adjective form of the noun luck.