Nascor, nasci, natus is deponent, meaning that it is passive in form but active in meaning. Thus "the earth is born" translates to "terra nascitur".
eau is feminineeau is feminine
"What is he (it, one, she)?" and "What are you?" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Che cos'è? The interrogative pronoun, feminine singular noun, and the present indicative verb in the third person singular (case 1) or second person formal singular (example 2) also translate literally into English as "What thing is he (it, one, she)?" and "What thing are you?" Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "key ko-SEH" in Italian.
"A" for a feminine noun. For example, "a fly" would be "une mouche".'Une' means 'a/an' or 'one' (and it's feminine)
In French, the word for "a" when describing a female noun is "une." This is the feminine singular indefinite article used before feminine nouns. For example, "une femme" means "a woman."
There is no Hebrew word for "are" or "an" but the Hebrew word for "you" is:masculine singular = atah (אתה)feminine singular = aht (את)masculine plural = atém (אתם)feminine plural = atén (אתן)for example: (speaking to a man): you are an idiot = atah idiot (אתה אידיוט)
Indefinite articles designate a, an, or some. They do not describe a particular object. For example: the chair. the is a definite article a chair: a is an indefinite article In spanish articles must also be changed to show femininity or masculinity, as well as singular of plural. un: a (masculine and singular) unos: some (masculine and plural) una: a (feminine and singular) unas: some (feminine and plural)
"What does he (one, she) have?" and "What do you have?" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Che cosa ha? The interrogative pronoun, feminine singular noun, and present indicative verb in the present indicative of third person singular (case 1) or second person formal singular (example 2) also translate literally into English as "What thing does he (one, she) have?" or "What thing do you have?" The pronunciation will be "key KO-sa ah" in Italian.
"Attracting" and "attractive" are English equivalents of the Italian word attraente. Context makes clear whether the word serves as a feminine/masculine singular present participle (case 1) or adjective (example 2). Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "AT-tra-EN-tey" in Italian.
Taciturno is an example of an Italian adjective whose spelling begins with the letter "t".Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an adjective which means "taciturn, uncommunicative". The feminine singular form is taciturna. The pronunciation will be "TA-tchee -TOOR-na" in the feminine and "TA-tchee-TOOR-no" in the masculine.
Amica in the feminine and amico in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "friend." The first-mentioned example is the singular form of a feminine noun whereas the second serves as the singular form of a masculine noun. The respective pronunciations of the singular nouns will be "a-MEE-ka" about a female and "a-MEE-ko" about a male in Italian.
Has eaten is present perfect.Present perfect is formed with have/has + past participle. Eaten is the past participle of eat.The boy has eaten his lunch -- singular subject - boyThey have eaten their lunches. -- plural subject - they
"Go" is an example of an irregular verb in past participle form. The past participle form of "go" is "gone."