"Sustained singing" and "the sustained song" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase il canto sostenuto. The masculine singular phrase most famously references the sustained notes in Italy's bel canto ("beautiful singing," "beautiful song") style of altered tempo, articulated phrasing, emotion-laden voice qualities and registers, and voice-supported gestures in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The pronunciation will be "eel KAN-to SO-stey-NOO-to" in Pisan Italian.
to sing: cantare I sing: io canto
"The song of the Italians" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Il canto degli italiani.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il is "the". The masculine noun canto means "song". The word degli means "of the". The masculine noun italiani translates as "Italians".The pronunciation will be "eel KAN-to DEY-lyee-ta-LYA-nee" in Italian.
Bel canto is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful singing."Specifically, the masculine adjective bel means "beautiful, handsome." The masculine noun canto means "chant, singing, song." The pronunciation is "behl KAHN-toh."
Aria as in Opera use, Canto or something like that for ( song) note similarity of Canto to (Chant) again the letter H is used sparingly in Italian and never at the beginning of a word- hence Enrico- for Henry Alto for Halt, etc.
"Green beauty" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Bella verde.Specifically, the feminine adjective/noun bella means "beautiful" in this context. The feminine/masculine adjective verde means "green." The pronunciation will be "BEHL-lah VEHR-day" in Italian.
The national song of the Italian Republic is called "Il Canto degli Italiani." In English, this translates to "The Song of the Italians."
Cantando is an Italian equivalent of the English word "singing." The above-mentioned example represents the present participle form of the present infinitive cantare ("to sing"). The pronunciation will be "kan-TA-rey" in Italian.
"Hear my song!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Oye mi canto! The exclamation most famously references the title of a reggaeton single released by N.O.R.E. (born Victor Santiago, Jr., Tuesday, Sept. 6, 1977) Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2004. The pronunciation will be "O-yey mee KAN-to" in Uruguayan Spanish.
Canto is Spanish or Italian and it means "I sing." English uses derive from the use of the Italian word in music. The root word is cantar meaning to sing. 'Canto' can also be a noun meaning 'the action and effect of singing;' 'the art of singing; and in some places, it can mean 'song.'
"Canto della terra" translates to "Song of the Earth" in English. "Canto" means "song" or "chant," and "terra" means "earth" or "land." The phrase often conveys a sense of connection to nature or a celebration of the beauty of the natural world.
"You challenge singing and win" is one English equivalent of the Italian phrase Contesta canto e picchia.Specifically, the verb contesta is "(he/it/one/she) challenges, does challenge, is challenging, (formal singular you) are challenging, challenge, do challenge". The masculine noun canto means "poem, singing, song". The conjunction emeans "and". The verb picchia means "(he/it/one/she) beats back/down, does beat back/down, is beating back/down, (formal singular you) are beating back/down, beats back/down, do beat back/down".The pronunciation will be "kohn-THE-stah KAHN-toh ey PEEK-kyah" in Italian.
Goffredo Mameli wrote Il Canto degli Italiani.