No, it is Spanish. It means "friend" or "companion", made up of the suffix "com" meaning "with" and "padre" meaning "father"
The Italian word for dynamics is "dynamics" and the Italian word for tempo is "tempo".
The Italian word Vino represents the word wine in the English language. The word is a masculine singular noun. It is an Italian word used in the Italian language.
"yes" = "si" in Italian.
"Fert" does not have a direct translation in Italian. It is not an Italian word.
The Italian word for 50 is "cinquanta."
Compare is an Italian equivalent of 'compadre'. The word in Italian is pronounced 'kohm-PAH-ray'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one']. Both the Italian and the Spanish words may be translated at 'compatriot, fellow countryman, villager'.
Comrade, Friend, Pal, Buddy. It is a term used between friends or to refer to a friend. It can be used by a stranger in the same way "Buddy" or "Pal" can be used in English to refer to a stranger, but without a negative or condescending connotation that sometimes accompany the English words.
compadre, amigo
No me defiendas compadre was created in 1949.
Compadre Records was created in 2001.
comrade, assistant, compadre, amigo, buddy any would work
Compare and padrino are Italian equivalents of the Spanish word compadre. The masculine singular noun in question may be found replaced locally and regionally by santolo. The respective pronunciations -- for these equivalents of "godfather" -- will be "kom-PA-rey" and "pa-DREE-no" in Italian and "kom-PA-drey" in Spanish.
El compadre Mendoza was created in 1934.
The song is called "Bailele Compadre"
hola you spell it like hola pronounced (oh-lah)
The Italian word for no is no.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.