"The beverage's grape" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase uva della bevanda. The feminine singular noun, preposition with feminine singular definite article, and feminine singular noun translate literally into English as "grape of the beverage (drink)." The pronunciation will be "OO-va DEL-la bey-VAN-da" in Italian.
It's Italian and when put into English, it translates out to "beautiful grape".
Cibo magnifico is an Italian equivalent of 'magnificent food'. The masculine noun 'cibo' means 'food'. The masculine adjective 'magnifico' means 'magnificent'. Together, they're pronounced 'CHEE-boh mahg-NEE-fee-koh'.
Pompelmo is an Italian equivalent of the English word "grapefruit."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article il means "the." Its singular indefinite article un, uno means "a, one."The pronunciation is "pohm-PEHL-moh."
"Una uva" in Spanish means "a grape" in English.
You say "uva pazzo".
l'uva is feminine.
Uve The grapes = Le uve (OR: L´uve) 1 grape = Una uva (OR: Un´ uva)
You say "Il uva pazzo".
The grapes
In Dutch it is pronounced: Rossuin In Spanish: pasa, (dried grape) uva seca In Italian: uva secca In French: raisin sec In German: Rosine In Russian: 'yizyOOm' (but in the Cyrillic alphabet)
Apple - Manzana (Spanish), Pomme (French), Apfel (German), Mela (Italian), Ringo (Japanese) Banana - PlΓ‘tano (Spanish), Banane (French), Banane (German), Banana (Italian), Banana (Japanese) Orange - Naranja (Spanish), Orange (French), Orange (German), Arancia (Italian), Orenji (Japanese) Grape - Uva (Spanish), Raisin (French), Traube (German), Uva (Italian), Budo (Japanese) Strawberry - Fresa (Spanish), Fraise (French), Erdbeere (German), Fragola (Italian), Ichigo (Japanese)