ridere tanto quanto si respira, come si vive is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
"avete una Bella risata" it means "you have a beautiful laugh"
permette all laugh at england nuovo You can always check at google translator
'To laugh' is an English equivalent of 'ridere'.The Italian word is a verb in its infinitive form. It's pronounced 'REE-deh-reh'. 'To laugh at' is 'ridere di', which is pronounced 'REE-deh-reh dee'.
Ridere ad alta voce is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Laugh out loud." The prepositional phrase translates literally by word order into English as "to laud at high voice." The pronunciation will be "REE-dey-rey a-DAL-ta VO-tchey" in Italian.
Ridere, in the infinitive. Ridi (sing) and Ridete (plural), in the imperative form. If you meant laughter, Risata.
'Wkwkwkwkwk' is actually not a phrase or even a word. It is similar to an onomatopoeia in English. It is the way some people in Indonesia write 'how they laugh'. To them, when people laugh, it sounds like 'wkwkwkwkwkwk'.
Dont breathe through your nose when you laugh.
Vivi, ridi, ama! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Live, laugh, love!" The three present imperatives in the second person informal singular serve as truncated versions of an Italian saying about living well, laughing often, loving a lot. The pronunciation will be "VEE-vee REE-dee A-ma" in Italian.
It is hard to breathe when you laugh out loud because you used most of you breathe to laugh as hard as you did. Try to get someone to make you laugh. Then see how long it takes you to catch your breathe...
It is ridere.
'To laugh at death' is an English equivalent of 'ridere della morte'.The infinitive 'ridere' means 'to laugh'. The dependent preposition 'di' means 'at' in this case'. The word 'della' combines the preposition 'di' with the feminine singular definite article 'la' to mean 'from, of the'. The feminine noun 'morte' means 'death'.All together, they're pronounced 'REE-deh-reh DEHL-lah MOHR-teh'.
Amare, vivere e ridere are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Love, live and laugh."Specifically, the infinitive amare means "to love." The infinitive vivere means "to live." The conjunction e means "and." The infinitive ridere means "to laugh."The pronunciation is "ah-MAH-reh vee-VEH-reh REE-deh-reh."