Italian herbs are used to make italian food. Though they're not specifically only for italian food, but if you have a container of "italian herbs" (rather than having things individually like oregano and basil) then it's useful for making most any italian food.
It depends. Might be "sun cream", "solar" and many other things. Can you make an example?
no italy and italian are to different things
Some things on Italian menu would be spaghetti, pizza, breadsticks, anything with cheese, and tiramisu.
Cose sulla lingua italiana is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "things about the Italian language." The pronunciation will be "KO-sey SUL-la LEEN-gwa EE-ta-LYA-na" in Italian.
Yes, it is an adjective describing people or things in or from Italy. It can also refer to things associated with Italy's culture. The word Italian is also a demonym (noun) for a person in or from Italy (an Italian), or referring to the language Italian.
Italian sausage Italian sauce
Forte is an Italian word! You should Google things more often or study Italian (it will help).
"Beautiful things!" in English is Cose belle! in Italian. The feminine plural phrase models a tendency of Italian to place adjectives after, not before, their nouns. The pronunciation will be "KO-sey BEL-ley" in Italian.
Cose and robe are Italian equivalents of the English word "things." Context makes clear whether "things" literally (case 1) or "stuff" colloquially (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciation will be "KO-sey" and "RO-bey" in Pisan Italian.
Come va?
Belle cose is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful things."Specifically, the feminine adjective belle means "beautiful." The feminine noun cose translates as "things." The pronunciation will be "BEL-ley KO-sey" in Italian.