Terra cotta is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "baked earth." The feminine singular noun and adjective/past participle may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or indefinite una ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "TER-ra KOT-ta" in Italian.
Salvatore della Terra.
The building material that means "baked earth" in Italian is called Terracotta!
"World" is an English equivalent of the Italian word mondo.Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be translated as "Earth, globe, universe, world." The pronunciation will be "MON-do" in Italian.
"Earth's" and "the earth's" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase della terra. The preposition with feminine singular definite article and feminine singular noun translate literally into English as "of the earth." The pronunciation will be "DEL-la TER-ra" in Italian.
Terra is an Italian equivalent of the English word "earth." The feminine singular noun references the planet or the soil when beginning respectively with a capitalized or small-letter "t." The pronunciation will be "TER-ra" in Italian.
Troppo bella per la Terra is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "too beautiful for Earth." The pronunciation will be "TROP-po BEL-la per la TER-ra" in Italian.
Terra cotta in Italian means "baked earth" in English and originates from the same-meaning Latin phrase terra cocta.
Terra nuova is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "new earth." The feminine singular noun and adjective may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or indefinite una ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "TER-ra NWO-va" in Italian.
Lumaca di terra is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "land snail." The feminine singular phrase translates literally as "snail of earth" in English. The pronunciation will be "loo-MA-ka dee TER-ra" in Italian.
Terra compatibile is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Earth-friendly."Specifically, the feminine noun terra means "Earth, earth, globe, land." The feminine/masculine adjective compatibile translates literally as "compatible" and loosely as "friendly, supportive." The pronunciation will be "TER-ra KOM-pa-TEE-bee-ley" in Italian.
La buona terra is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "good earth."Specifically, the feminine singular definite article la -- which may or may not be translated into or used in English -- is "the." The feminine adjective buona means "good." The feminine noun terra translates as "earth."The pronunciation will be "la BWO-na TER-ra" in Italian.
Terra cotta takes its name from the Italian words "terra" (earth) and "cotta" (baked). This type of pottery is known for its reddish-brown color and is often left unglazed.