Arrivare is a common Italian equivalent of 'to arrive'. It's the infinitive form of the verb. It's pronounced 'ah-ree-VAH-ray'.* Another equivalent is giungere, which is pronounced 'gee-OON-jay-*ray'.*
*The sound 'ay' is similar to the sound 'ay' in the English noun 'ray'.
"When did you arrive?" in English is Quando sei arrivato?when tralking to a man, Quando sei arrivata? when talking to a woman, and Quando siete arrivati? when talking to a group of people in Italian.
"Translate English into Italian" in English is Traduca l'inglese in italiano in Italian.
"An Italian policeman" in English means un carabiniere in Italian.
The Italian word for no is no.
"To have" in English means avere in Italian.
They came in 1881
Christopher Columbus, an Italian explorer.
The first Italian to arrive and settle in Australia was convict Giuseppe Tuzo, who arrived with the First Fleet in 1788.
"When did you arrive?" in English is Quando sei arrivato?when tralking to a man, Quando sei arrivata? when talking to a woman, and Quando siete arrivati? when talking to a group of people in Italian.
No, there are no customs in the Vatican. However, since all travelers to the Vatican arrive through Rome and would be subject to Italian Customs at that point.
Italians go to new york when they come to America so they can start lives and find work in factories
Arrive at or arrive in London.
Arrive at
You say "arrive at" when referring to a destination or specific location. For example, "We arrived at the airport." "Arrive to" is not the correct preposition to use with "arrive."
It is an Italian word meaning "spouses," a married pair. I see it used mostly in the context of newlyweds. I might say, "We will put up the sposi and my uncle when they arrive."
llegar = to arrive llego = I arrive llega = you or he arrives llegamos = we arrive llegan = they arrive
I numeri italiani is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the Italian numbers." The masculine plural definite article, noun, and adjective model a common instance where the two languages arrive at different ultimate sentence structures, with English putting adjectives before, and Italian after, nouns. The pronunciation will be "ee NOO-mey-ree EE-ta-LYA-nee" in Italian.