it's caolled lift thine eyes i have to sing it in high school it's one of my favorite song
Greek and Italian.
Noah Stewart
Operatic pop is the genre of the Italian song Con te partirò, whose literal translation is "With you I will leave" in English. The genre in question puts a classical music motif or theme or operatic singing style into the pop music context. The pronunciation of the prepositional phrase, whose most famous performance is by Lajatico-born Italian classical crossover tenor Andrea Bocelli at the 1995 Sanremo Music Festival, will be "kon tey PAR-tee-RO" in Italian.
Opera is the form of music that often is sung in Italian. The musical genre numbers among the manifestations of classical musical. It originates in sixteenth-century Italy with the performance in 1598 of Dafne by Jacobo Peri (August 20, 1561 - August 12, 1633) in Florence.
Usually it was a minuet (from French "menuet"; in Italian "minuetto"), but sometimes other, normally a dance or a short sequence of dances, before the fourth (finale), that was commonly an allegro, as the first was as well.
'Female professor' in Italian is 'professoressa'.
"The professor' in English is il professore in Italian.
Gisella is the Italian form of Giselle, which means 'hostage' or 'pledge'.
In the classical genre, opera.
classical, I guess.
yes it was
professor comes from latin (means something like "the one that brings something forward") and as latin is the mother of Italian the word is quite similar: "professore"
There are no spurious classical languages. To be spurious would mean they were fake. The classical languages include French, Spanish, Italian, Latin, and Greek.
Greek and Italian.
Yes
"Life" is an English equivalent of the Italian and Latin word vita. The feminine singular noun will be found more accurately spelled vīta in classical Latin. The pronunciation will be "VEE-ta" in Italian and "WEE-tuh" in classical Latin.
The first female physics professor was Laura Bassi, a pioneering Italian scientist who was appointed as a professor of anatomy at the University of Bologna in 1732.