Fortunato il sette! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Lucky seven!" The masculine phrase translates literally as "Fortunate the seven" and may be replaced by il sette fortunato ("the lucky seven") according to birthplace, context and personal preference. The respective pronunciations will be "FOR-too-NA-to eel SET-tey" and "eel SET-tey FOR-too-NA-to" in Pisan Italian.
Danza- Dance Danzare- to Dance Io Danzo- I Dance Tu Danzi- You dance Lui\Lei Danza- He\She Dances Noi Danziamo- We dance Voi Danzate- You(plural) Dance Essi\Loro Danzano- They Dance
Settantasette is an Italian equivalent of '77'. The masculine number 'settanta' means '70'. The masculine number 'sette' means '7'. It's pronounced 'seht-TAHN-tah-SEHT-teh'.
Its what language your speaking in now, English. Bobo =7
'they don't arrive at 7:45 on the dot.'
Most directly translated:« La Huitième Année » aka: The 8th grade in the "North American" English system.In Québec it would be: « Secondaire deux » aka: secondary two, they start high school in grade 7, and call it secondary (school grade) 1, grade eight is secondary 2, etc.In France it would be: « Quatrième » aka: 4th, they count high school grades backwards, Sixth, Fifth, Fourth, Third, First, Final.The only "number" that is the same in all three systems is grade 6.
"Number seven" in English is (il) numero sette in Italian.
Novantasette is an Italian equivalent of the English number "97." It merges the numbers novanta ("ninety," "90") and sette ("seven," "7"). The pronunciation will be "no-VAN-ta-SET-tey" in Pisan Italian.
Ventisette. Venti is 20. Sette is 7. Pronounced ven tee se te.
Come venderne sette? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "How do you sell seven?" The question translates literally as "How to sell seven of them?" in English. The pronunciation will be "KO-mey ven-DER-ney SET-tey" in Pisan Italian.
Diciassette is an Italian equivalent of the English number "seventeen." The cardinal number in question (17) merges the numbers dieci ("ten," "10") and sette ("seven," "7"). The pronunciation will be "DEE-tchas-SET-tey" in Italian.
Gesù is a literal Italian equivalent of the English name "Jesu." The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- which most famously links with Jesus of Nazareth (7 - 2 B.C. - A.D. 30 - 33) -- will be "djey-SOO" in Italian.
Sette fratelli! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Seven brothers!" The masculine plural phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine plural i since Italian employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ee) SET-tey fra-TEL-lee" in Pisan Italian.
Milano is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Milan." The northwest peninsular city in question is known for exciting 24/7 lifestyles as well as for archaeological finds, cultural accomplishments, economic achievements, historic events, and industrial production. The pronunciation will be "mee-LA-no" in Italian.
The numbers from one to 10 in English are una or uno, due, tre, quattro, cinque, sei, sette, otto, nove and dieciin Italian.The numbers "1 to 10" when translated from English to Italian are the following:1. uno; 2. due; 3. tre; 4. quattro; 5. cinque; 6. sei; 7. sette; 8. otto; 9. nove; 10. dieci.
Il mio primo amore is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "my first love." The masculine singular phrase most famously references a song by Rome-born Italian singer Claudio Villa (January 1, 1926 - February 7, 1987) from 1985. The pronunciation will be "eel MEE-o PREE-mo a-MO-rey" in Italian.
"Malcolm" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Malina. The proper noun serves as the feminine form of the masculine proper noun Malcom, both of which originate in the Scottish Gaelic name Máel Coluim ("Malcolm," "disciple of Saint Columba [December 7, 521 - June 9, 597]"). The pronunciation will be "ma-LEE-na" in Italian.
Mangio arcobaleni! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I eat rainbows!" The declaration most famously links with a Facebook page on butterflies and with a song by Giuseppe Mango (November 6, 1945 to December 7, 2014) of Lagonegro, Basilicata, Italy. The pronunciation will be "MAN-djo AR-ko-ba-LEY-nee" in Pisan Italian.