simialar ones
Il mio re is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "my kind." The masculine singular definite article, possessive, and noun translate literally by word word into English as "the my kind" since Italian requires a definite article where English does not. The pronunciation will be "eel MEE-o rey" in Italian.
"Sweetly singing" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase dolce cantando. The pronunciation of the adverb (formally written dolcemente) and gerund will be "DOL-tchey kan-TAN-do" in Italian.
Kind Regards
First Trattoria is an Italian word, not a french one, and it means a kind of restaurant
"Similar" as an adjective and "Fellow creature" or "One's own kind" as a noun may be English equivalents of "simile."Specifically, the word "simile" is the masculine/feminine singular form of an Italian adjective. Spelled the same way, it is a masculine singular noun whose singular definite article is "il" ("the"), and whose singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").But regardless of the meaning and use, the pronunciation remains the same: "SEE-mee-leh."
Subject-verb-objectare the grammatical arrangements of the English and Italian languages.Specifically, the person or thing that is responsible for the action generally comes first in the sentence. The action is revealed next. The person or thing impacted by the action occurs last in both languages if it is a case of nouns. If it is a matter of object pronouns, English will place the object pronoun after the verb whereas Italian - except when the verb assumes the imperative (command) form, in which case the object pronoun is like English in occurring afterward - will put the object pronoun between the subject and the verb.
"You are very kind!" in English is Sei molto gentile! in Italian.
Essere buono! in Italian means "Be kind!" in English.
Il mio re is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "my kind." The masculine singular definite article, possessive, and noun translate literally by word word into English as "the my kind" since Italian requires a definite article where English does not. The pronunciation will be "eel MEE-o rey" in Italian.
"I don't deserve this kind of love!" in English is Io non merito questo tipo di amore! in Italian.
Strozzaprezzi is a kind of pasta, which translates from the Italian as "strangled priests"!
Italian is considered a descendant of Latin. Latin is the ancient language spoken by the Romans, which evolved over time to become the Italian language we know today. Italian shares many similarities with Latin in terms of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
Grazie! Sei davvero gentile! in Italian means "Thank you! You're really kind!" in English.
"Good" is an English equivalent of the Italian word buon. The masculine singular adjective also translates as "able," "capable," "kind," "nice" or "tasty" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "bwon" in Pisan Italian.
multo gentilli o tu sai gentilli
"To live" is an English equivalent of the Italian word vivere. The present infinitive means "to live" in the sense of having life or leading a certain kind of existence of lifestyle. The pronunciation will be "VEE-vey-rey" in Italian.
Turkish. But %70 Turks can speak English, Italian, Deutch, Arabic.