The Italian word "domani" translates to English "see you tomorrow." "Domani" is a very common Italian phrase and is used daily in the Italin language.
In English, the Italian word "boca" translates to "mouth."
The Italian word vivo translates into the English word alive. The Italian word vivo also has the translation into the English word living or to live.
The Italian word 'casa' translates to 'house' or 'home' in English.
"La Cuesta" is Spanish, not Italian, and it means "the hill" or "the slope" in English.
"Degli" is a contraction in Italian meaning "of the" and "Dei" means "of the" in English.
Did you hear this word in a north African country ? Domani in Italian means tomorrow.
"Until tomorrow" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase a domani.Specifically, the preposition a means "at, till, to, until." The adverb/masculine noun domani means "tomorrow." The pronunciation is "ah doh-MAH-nee."
"Tomorrow" is an English equivalent of the Italian noun domani.Specifically, the Italian word may be an adverb or a noun. As a noun, it is masculine. But either way, the pronunciation is the same: "doh-MAH-nee."
In English, the Italian word "boca" translates to "mouth."
"idee" is the Italian word for "ideas" but in the singular, the Italian word is the same as the English one. I mean English - Italian = idea - idea :) get it?
The Italian word vivo translates into the English word alive. The Italian word vivo also has the translation into the English word living or to live.
Dell'Anno is an Italian word that means: Of the year.
The Italian word 'casa' translates to 'house' or 'home' in English.
Mattina is an Italian equivalent of the English word "morning." The feminine singular noun also translates less frequently and more formally as "forenoon" in English. The pronunciation will be "mat-TEE-na" in Italian.
sul = on
Dopo is an Italian equivalent of the English word "after." The word also can be used as an adjective to mean "following" or "next" and as an adverb and preposition to mean "beyond" in English. The pronunciation will be "DO-po" in Pisan Italian.
No, the words 'Italian' and 'Sicilian' don't mean the same in English. Neither do they mean the same thing in Italian or Sicilian. In Italian, the words are 'italiano' and 'siciliano'. The word 'italian' refers to a native of the Italian peninsula. The word 'siciliano' refers to an Italian who's native to the island of Sicily.