This catchy little tune was written by Italian Composer Piero Umiliani. It was originally written for and used in a Swedish soft-porn movie called "Sweden - Heaven and Hell". The song hit the US charts in 1969, peaking at #55 on 10/4/69. It has been covered by the Muppets, Cake, Hot Butter, and Lipstique, among others.
"Significhi tutto per me" (You mean everything to me) was included in Neil Sedaka's album Sings the Hits (1999). He originally wrote and sang the song in 1960 and it reached #17 on the US Billboard Chart.
Trombone is trombone in Italian.
nat wolff is not italian.
I don't speak Italian is "Non parlo italiano".
Heaven in Italian is "Paradiso."
Cucina Paradiso in Italian means "Paradise Kitchen" in English.
paradiso
Paradiso is an Italian equivalent of the English word "paradise." The masculine singular noun may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular il since Italian employs definite articles even where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(eel) PA-ra-DEE-zo" in Pisan Italian.
"A little slice of heaven" in English is una piccola fetta di paradiso in Italian.
Paradiso dei cavalli is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "horses' paradise."Specifically, the masculine noun paradiso is "paradise." The word dei means "of the" from the combination of the preposition di ("of") and the masculine plural article i ("the"). The masculine noun cavalli translates as "horses."The pronunciation will be "PA-ra-DEE-zo dey ka-VAL-lee" in Italian.
Incontrarsi in paradiso is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "meet in paradise."Specifically, the infinitive incontrare means "to meet." The reflexive pronoun si means "oneself." The preposition in means "in." The masculine noun paradiso means "paradise."The pronunciation is "EEN-kohn-TRAHR-seen PAH-rah-DEE-zoh."
"To meet in paradise" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase incontrarsi in paradiso.Specifically, the infinitive incontrare means "to meet." The reflexive pronoun si means "oneself." The preposition in means "in." The masculine noun paradiso means "paradise."The pronunciation is "EEN-kohn-TRAHR-seen PAH-rah-DEE-zoh."
Paradiso trovato is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Paradise Found." The masculine singular phrase most famously recalls the epic poem "Paradise Regained" (Il Paradiso Riconquistato) published in 1671 by John Milton (Tuesday, December 9, 1608 to Thursday, November 8, 1674) of London, England. The pronunciation will be "PA-ra-DEE-so tro-VA-to" in Pisan Italian.
Three. The first is for love, the second is for companionship, the third is nonsense.
It's Italian, not French, and not in black and white (but the kissing scenes cut and put together are): Cinema Paradiso (Nuovo cinema Paradiso).
Paradiso is an Italian equivalent of the English word "paradise".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "PA-ra-DEE-zo" in Italian.