"Square" is an English equivalent of the Italian word piazza.
Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine indefinite article una ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "PYAHT-tsah" in Italian.
"Spain's public square" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Piazza di Spagna.Specifically, the feminine noun piazza means "(public) square." The preposition di means "of." The feminine noun Spagna means "Spain."The pronunciation is "PYAHT-tsah dee SPAH-nyah."
campi"piazza della città (luogo centrale della città)"This means "Square of the city (central location of the city)"
Piazza di Firenze is an Italian equivalent of "Florence Square." The feminine singular noun, preposition, and proper noun translate literally into English as "square ("market place, "town clearing") of Florence." The pronunciation will be "PYAT-tsa dee fee-REN-tsey" in Italian.
Mercato is an Italian equivalent of 'piazza'. The feminine gender noun 'piazza' may be translated into English as 'square, open space in town, market place, market'. It's particularly in the sense of 'market' and 'market place' that the masculine gender noun 'mercato' becomes a good synonym. It takes as its definite article 'il' ['the'], and as its indefinite article 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'mehr-KAH-toh'.
Italian
The phrase "piazza Italia" refers to an Italian square or an Italian market. A piazza usually features a roofed or arched passageway into the public square.
Italian
piazza
A piazza is a square, usually with a big centerpiece such as a fountain.
"This square is the most beautiful in Italy" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Questa piazza è la più bella d'Italia.Specifically, the feminine indefinite adjective questais "this." The feminine noun piazza means "piazza, square." The present indicative verb è means "(it) is." the feminine definite article la means "the." The comparative/superlative più means "more, most" according to context. The feminine adjective bella means "beautiful." The preposition di* means "of." The feminine noun Italia translates as "Italy."The pronunciation will be "KWEY-sta PYAT-tsa eh la pyoo BEL-la dee-TA-lya" in Italian.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a noun whose spelling begins with a vowel.
Ferdinando Bottarelli has written: 'The new Italian, English and French pocket-dictionary' 'Exercises upon the different parts of Italian speech; with references to Veneroni's grammar. To which is subjoined, an abridgement of the Roman history, intended at once to make the learner acquainted with history, and the idiom of the Italian language' 'Exercises upon the different parts of Italian speech'
piazza means square (like an open area in a town, not the shape.) in Italian, so there really isn't an antonym.