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"In any case I understood nothing there. Bye!" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Non c'ho capito niente comunque. Ciao! The adverb, elided adverb and present perfect auxiliary, past participle, adverbs, and greeting model a feature of colloquial, conversational, friendly, informal Italian whereby the adverb/pronoun ci assumes a host of meanings, here as "there" in the sense of "in all of this." The pronunciation will be "non tcho ka-PEA-to NYEN-ey ko-MOON-kwey tchow" in Italian.

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Related Questions

What is 'understood' when translated from English to Italian?

"Understood" in English is Capito in Italian.


What is 'Got it' when translated from English to Italian?

"Got it!" in English is Ho capito! in Italian.


What is 'Ho capito che ti amo' when translated from Italian to English?

Ho capito che ti amo in Italian means "I understood that I love you" in English.


What is 'I have read and understood' when translated from English to Italian?

Ho letto e capito


What is 'capito' when translated from Italian to English?

"Understood!" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word Capito! The masculine singular past participle in question translates also into English as "Clenched!and "Got it!" according to context. But regardless of meaning or use as an affirmative or interrogative, the pronunciation will be "ka-PEA-to" in Italian.


What is 'I got it' when translated from English to Italian?

capito is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.


What is Italian word for understand?

Capito or Capisco


What is 'You got that right' when translated from English to Italian?

Hai capito bene! or Hai fatto bene! in the singular "you" and Avete capito bene! or Avete fatto bene! in the plural "you all" are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You got that right!" Context makes clear whether correctly comprehending (cases 1, 3) or properly doing (examples 2, 4) something suits. The respective pronunciations will be "eye FAT-to BEH-ney" or "eye FAT-to BEH-ney" in the singular and "a-VEY-tey ka-PEA-to BEH-ney" or "a-VEY-tey FAT-to BEH-ney" in the plural in Pisan Italian.


What is the answer to the Italian question 'Capito'?

Capisco! and Sì, capito, sì! are answers to the Italian question Capito? The question means "Understood?" whereas the response translates as "Understood!" in the first-mentioned example and "Yes, understood, yes!" in the second. The respective pronunciations will be "ka-PEA-sko" and "see ka-PEA-to see" for the answers and "ka-PEA-to" for the query Italian.


What is 'Ho finito' when translated from Italian to English?

"I've understood" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ho capito. The present indicative auxiliary and past participle also translate into English as "I have understood" and "I understood." The pronunciation will be "oh ka-PEA-to" in Italian.


What is 'You understand' when translated from English to Italian?

Non capisci is an Italian equivalent of 'You don't understand'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'non' means 'not'. The verb 'capisci' means '[he/she/it] does understand, is understanding, understands'. It's pronounced 'nohn kah-PEE-shee'.That's the form that's used among the close circle of one's family and friends. Another form is used with an individual who's senior in age or position, or who isn't part of that close, familial and friendly circle. The form then becomes 'capisce', which means '[formal you] understand, [he/she/it] understands'. It's pronounced 'kah-PEE-shay'.


When was Wolfgang Capito born?

Wolfgang Capito was born in 1478.