Acque lucenti is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "shining waters." The feminine plural phrase also translates as "sparkling waters" according to English context. The pronunciation will be "A-kwe loo-TCHEN-tee" in Pisan Italian.
"Water" is an English equivalent of "agua."Specifically, the Spanish word is a feminine noun. But it takes the masculine singular definite article "el" ("the") in the singular. One reason lies in the reluctance to follow the ending vowel "a" of the feminine singular definite article "la" with the beginning vowel "a" of "agua." The feminine definite plural article "las" is used with the plural "aguas" ("waters").The pronunciation is "AH-gwah."
what is the summary of the story Waters of Gold
The origin of the name Avan, is Persian and it means "waters".
waters
Aguas Azules
Acqua blu is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "blue water." The feminine singular phrase may be substituted by acqua azzurra ("azure water") or acqua celeste("sky-blue water") according to English context. The pronunciation will be "A-kwa bloo" in Pisan Italian.
Belle acque is the Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful waters." The phrase may refer to the waters in a cologne, tonic or water body. The pronunciation will be "BEL-ley A-kwey" in Italian.
Hot baths or hot springs is the English equivalent of 'terme'. The word in Italian is a feminine gender noun in its plural form. Another phrase of the same meaning in Italian is 'acque termali', which translates as 'thermal waters' or 'hot springs'.
The prophets wrote the books of Tauns and Alenas, Waters and Airs, and was translated to English in 1523 to 1624.The original texts were translated from Greek and Afrikaans, Egyptian.
"The Positano" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Il Positano. The masculine singular definite article and noun reference a small southern peninsular town on Italy's Amalfi Coast and traces its origins back to a stormy voice telling pirates to Posa ("Put down!") their theft of a precious black Madonna icon where the Campania region now claims the above-mentioned town. The pronunciation will be "eel PO-see-TA-no" in Italian.
A hundred waters.
Named by Algonkian speaking Indians, the Mississippi can be translated as Father of Waters. The Indus river in South Asia is known as the Father of Rivers
No, salmon comes from cold waters like the North Atlantic and the North Pacific.
If you are English - the English Channel If you are French - La Manche
'Brown water' is a literal English equivalent of 'AcquaScura'. The phrase may call to mind 'muddy, difficult to see through waters' such as those of Loch Ness, with its high peat content. Or it may call to mind a specialty drink, such as 'birra scura' ['brown ale'].
"Blood waters" is a literal English equivalent of the French name Signargues. It references a southern French plateau and red wine whose meaning comes from the sang ("blood") argues (Occitanian for eaux, "waters") during Frankish ruler Charles Martel's (690? - 741) battle against Europe-invading, Islam-professing Saracens in 736. It will be pronounced "see-nyarg" in northern French and "see-nyar-guh" in southerly French.
Singleton Waters Davis has written: 'Origin and evolution of ethics' -- subject(s): Ethics, History 'Humanitarian proverbs and some humanitarian beatitudes' -- subject(s): English Proverbs, Proverbs, English