Mangia e cresci! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Eat and grow!"
Specifically, the preset imperative mangia is "(informal singular you) eat!" The conjunction e means "and". The present imperative cresci translates as "(informal singular you) grow".
The pronunciation will be "MAN-dja ey KREY-shee" in Italian.
Cresciuto is a common Italian equivalent of 'grown'. It's the past participle of the infinitive 'crescere', which means 'to grow'. It's pronounced 'kreh-SHOO-toh'.
Other equivalents are 'adulto' and 'maturo'. These are the masculine forms of the adjective in Italian. The feminine forms are 'adulta' and 'matura'.
"To grow them" is an English equivalent of the Italian words crescerle and crescerli.Specifically, the word crescere* is a present infinitive whose meanings include "to develop, to grow, to increase." The feminine pronoun le and the masculine li translate as "them." The pronunciation will be "krey-SHEHR-ley" and "krey-SHEHr-lee" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when an object pronoun is added at the end of the present infinitive.
Translation of "thick grow rush leaves": It is not clear what the exact phrase is intended to mean. Could you please provide more context or clarify your question?
The English translation for the French comment grossir is grow. You can find other translations for the comment grossir on the website Google Translate.
The English translation of the Tagalog word "patilya" is "sideburns."
The English translation of "diligan" is "to water" or "watering." It refers to the act of providing water to plants or crops to help them grow.
mangiare mangiare crescere grasso
Crepuscolo is the literal Italian equivalent of 'dusk'. It's a masculine gender noun that may be translated as 'twilight, gloaming, dusk'. It's pronounced 'kray-POO-skoh-loh'.But another equivalent is the phrase 'sull'imbrunire', which means 'at dusk'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'sul, sulla, sullo' means 'on the'. The infinitive 'imbrunire' means 'to turn, make or grow dark'.
cumulus= to gather or grow cumulus clouds are growing vapor in a rising thermal english translation = Accumulate
Glory grows is the English equivalent of 'Splendor crescit'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'splendor' means 'glory'. The verb 'crescit' means '[he/she/it] does grow, grows, is growing'.
as in CAT whiskers: baffi (baf-fee)as in a man whose moustache is starting to grow back: basette (baz-ET-the), the S here is pronounced as in Zebra in English, as there is only one S. Double SS in Italian is as S in Snake.
(This is an Italian surname meaning "little cave".) At least one definitive source pronounces it with the "oh" sound, as "grow-tee-CHELL-ah", as opposed to the sound of the English grotto, which is "GRAH-tow".
To germinate is a synonym of the English phrase "to begin to grow or to sprout." The present infinitive references a process which takes a plant from the seed phase to the seedling stage. The process results in the production of above-ground flowers, foliage, and fruits and of below-ground roots, both of which are needed to take the vegetation in question through proper life cycles and natural histories.