americano
Niente is an Italian equivalent of the Italian-American slang word "oongats" or "ungatz." The word means "nothing." The pronunciation will be "NYEN-tey" in Italian.
The Italian word for no is no.
The Word for Hunter in Italian is a Cacciatore. The Word for Hunter in Italian is a Cacciatore.
"100 years" is an English equivalent of the Italian-American phrase "Gin Dan."Specifically, the word "gin" represents the Italian masculine noun cento* ("one hundred, 100"). The word "dan" stands for the Italian masculine noun anni ("years"). The pronunciation is "tchehn-TAHN-nee."*The final vowel drops and is replaced by an apostrophe before a noun which begins with a vowel.
The Italian word for ghost is fantasma.
"Best friend" is an English equivalent of the Italian-American word gumba. The word originates in the Sicilian pronunciation of the peninsular Italian word compare("godfather"). The pronunciation will be "GOOM-ba" or "goom-BA" -- depending upon the speaker's birthplace -- in slang Italian and "kom-PA-rey" in peninsular Italian.
Niente is an Italian equivalent of the Italian-American slang word "oongats" or "ungatz." The word means "nothing." The pronunciation will be "NYEN-tey" in Italian.
Paesano is an Italian equivalent of the Italian American word paizon.Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It also may be found written as paisÃ? or paisano depending upon the speaker's birthplace. It means "countryman" literally and "brother, comrade" loosely.The pronunciation will be "pye-ZA-no" in Italian.
A cafone is a slang term for a boorish, uneducated Italian-American - also the Italian word for a peasant, or a boor.
Hickory is an American hardwood tree - it is from the native Anerican language
"Co-fathers" is a literal English equivalent of the colloquial, regional Italian word cumpares.Specifically, the Italian word is the plural form of a masculine noun. It refers to a special relationship of assistance, influence and power which may be held in Italian and Italian American communities. The pronunciation will be "koom-PAH-reyss" in Italian.
My Italian-American mother and her siblings used to refer to pizza as something that sounded like abetz. This is Italian-American New York slang. They grew up in the Harlem section of Manhattan in the 1920's and 30's.
Odierno is Italian. In Italian, it literally means "of the day".
"Mistress" is an English equivalent of the Italian American slang word gooma.Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its singular form. Its pronunciation reflects Sicilian influences of hard "g" for the letter "c" while its spelling reflects Italian American influences of "oo" for the "u" sound. It traces back to the Italian feminine noun comare ("godmother").The pronunciation will be "GOO-ma" or "goo-MA" in Italian.
"Get it?" is one English equivalent of the Italian-American slang word Chapish?Specifically, the word functions as the informal second person singular form of the present indicative of the present infinitive capire ("to understand"). In formal Italian, it is spelled Capisci? Regardless of the speaker's location or the word's spelling, it means "do (informal singular you) get (it), understand?"The pronunciation will be "ka-PEA-shee" in formal Italian.
The Italian word for no is no.
Madonna is an American. Her father is Italian American, her mother was French-Canadian American.