Diavolo is an Italian equivalent of 'devil'. It's a masculine noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'dee-AH-voh-loh'.
"Devil" in English is diavolo in Italian.
"The devil" in English is il diavolo in Italian.
Diavolo is "devil" in Italian.
bel diavoletto
Diavoletto is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish word diablito. The masculine singular noun translates literally into English as "little devil." The respective pronunciations will be "DYA-vo-LET-to" in Italian and "dya-BLEE-to" in Spanish.
"Monte del diavolo" is an Italian equivalent of the English phase "Devil's Mountain."Specifically, the masculine noun "monte" means "devil." The word "del" combines the preposition "di" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of the." The masculine noun "diavolo" means "devil."The pronunciation is "MOHN-teh dehl DYAH-voh-loh."
French: devil = diable (pronounce dee-a-bler) Spanish: devil = diablo (dee-a-blow) German :devil = Teufel (toy-fell) Welsh : devil = diawl (dee-owl)
Timothy Holme has written: 'The Devil and the Dolce Vita' 'The Penguin Italian reader' -- subject(s): Italian language, Readers 'The Neapolitan Streak' -- subject(s): Protected DAISY, Church history 'Vile Florentines' -- subject(s): History, To 1421 'The devil and the dolce vita'
"Devil's Mountain" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Monte del diavolo. The masculine singular noun, preposition with masculine singular definite article, and masculine singular noun translate literally into English as "mountain of (the) devil." The pronunciation will be "MON-tey dee DYA-vo-lo."
Arlecchino Harlequin is a fictional character who appears in Commedia dellâ??arte Italian plays. Harlequin, is thought to be a descendant of the devil.
Spanish: diablo French: diable German: Teufel Italian: diavolo
"What the devil is this?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Che diavolo è questa?Specifically, the interrogative che is "what". The masculine noun diavolo literally means "devil" and figuratively "hell". The verb è means "(he/it/she) is, (formal singular you) are". The feminine demonstrative pronoun questa translates as "this, this one".The pronunciation will be "key* DYAH-voh-loh eh KWEH-stah" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Hey!"