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-   -   [Italian] Italian (https://forums.tomisimo.org/showthread.php?t=1453)

Italian


María José June 11, 2008 02:27 PM

Italian
 
Could you please tell me these words in Italian: key, son, father, mother, well(pozo), moon, castle, horse, man, woman, sun, Monday, Wednesday, Sunday, week? I'm helping my daughter with her homework and we have to translate these words into lots of different languages...:confused:

Rusty June 11, 2008 04:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gemma (Post 10237)
Could you please tell me these words in Italian: key, son, father, mother, well(pozo), moon, castle, horse, man, woman, sun, Monday, Wednesday, Sunday, week? I'm helping my daughter with her homework and we have to translate these words into lots of different languages...:confused:

key = chiave
son = figlio
father = padre
well(pozo) = posso
moon = luna
castle = castello
horse = cavallo
man = uomo
woman = donna
sun = sole
Monday = lunedì
Wednesday = mercoledì
Sunday = domenica
week = domani

María José June 12, 2008 12:27 AM

Thanks, Rusty.

Alfonso June 12, 2008 12:37 AM

Ma domani non è week, ma tomorrow.
Week è settimana.

María José June 12, 2008 01:11 AM

Gracias. He tenido que traducir esas palabras a gallego, sueco, euskera,latín, catalán,alemán, portugués, asturiano... Me pregunto para qué les sirve eso. El profe lo sabrá... Nunca en mi vida había visto tantos diccionarios de internet. :yuck:

Rusty June 12, 2008 07:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alfonso (Post 10247)
Ma domani non è week, ma tomorrow.
Week è settimana.

Sei corretto, Alfonso.
Avevo fatto una volta prima lo stesso sbaglio. :eek:

Elaina June 12, 2008 07:58 AM

Alfonso,

Are you saying that domani means tomorrow and not week?

Elaina:?:

Rusty June 12, 2008 08:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Elaina (Post 10282)
Alfonso,

Are you saying that domani means tomorrow and not week?

Elaina:?:

Yes, he is. I was wrong.
domani = tomorrow

Sorry to jump in.

Elaina June 12, 2008 08:28 AM

No problem......you know I have been trying to learn very basic Italian and I remember hearing domani = tomorrow. But thinking maybe I was mistaken. This is why I was asking.

Thanks!
Elaina:cool:

Rusty June 12, 2008 08:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Elaina (Post 10287)
No problem......you know I have been trying to learn very basic Italian and I remember hearing domani = tomorrow. But thinking maybe I was mistaken. This is why I was asking.

Thanks!
Elaina:cool:

I was in a real hurry when I posted, and the wrong word came crashing through. That wasn't the first time I've used it incorrectly, though. I need to keep thinking seven, setti, settimana.

Jessica October 06, 2008 02:59 PM

Looks like you got your answers.

irmamar April 15, 2009 10:19 AM

Rusty. Tu anche parli italiano? Io parlo soltanto un po'. Ho fatto un corso d'italiano fa tanti anni... e ho dimenticato tuto, ma sarebbe un piacere parlare un po' con qualcuno.

Rusty April 15, 2009 10:49 AM

Non parlo italiano. Lo ho studiato da solo, ma non molto. Lo leggo bene e capisco un po'. :)

irmamar April 15, 2009 12:11 PM

Bene, come me. Giá siamo due! È difficile ricordare parole adesso esteso, che fa anni che non parlo con nessuno, se bene a volte sento parlare.

ROBINDESBOIS June 27, 2009 06:46 AM

Io anche posso parlare italiano, mi piace tantissimo, mi chiedo se in questo chat c´è qualquno che possa dirmi di tanto in tano l´equivalente di certi modismi. I modismi mi afascinano. Non solo in inglese ma anche in italiano e francese. Grazie a tutti.

irmamar June 28, 2009 12:32 PM

Io posso parlare un po' d'italiano, ma non credo que ti posso aiutare con i modismi :( , non so tanto italiano :)

brute June 29, 2009 04:04 PM

I love the sound of Italian. It contains all the most beautiful sounds. I would love to learn it, but NOT UNTIL I have a better knowledge of Spanish. It is too similar to Spanish and would confuse me too much. I would also like to learn Portuguese for the opposite reason. It sounds so unusual and challenging.

I notice that Spanish takes such words as Spaghetti which is already plural (singular spaghetto) and adds an S to make it doubly plural. The spelling is further mangled so that the Spanish can pronounce it.

ESPAGUETIS

poli June 29, 2009 06:00 PM

English really botches up Italian too. Have you ever heard of the dish
shrimp scampi?:rolleyes: In the USA, a popular drink is called a latte. It's an espresso with steamed milk combo which I am sure is also available at any Starbucks in the UK too. The reality is that latte means milk-- just milk nothing more in Italian.

Portuguese sounds really nice too, and I am surprized you find it odd-sounding. Brazilian Portuguese is especially nice. Written Portuguese is similar to Spanish, even more similar than Italian.

irmamar June 30, 2009 01:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brute (Post 40510)
I love the sound of Italian. It contains all the most beautiful sounds. I would love to learn it, but NOT UNTIL I have a better knowledge of Spanish. It is too similar to Spanish and would confuse me too much. I would also like to learn Portuguese for the opposite reason. It sounds so unusual and challenging.

I notice that Spanish takes such words as Spaghetti which is already plural (singular spaghetto) and adds an S to make it doubly plural. The spelling is further mangled so that the Spanish can pronounce it.

ESPAGUETIS

Yes, and we also say 'los paparazzis' (paparazzo, pl.: paparazzi). Spanish doesn't make the plural with 'i', as in Italian with male names, for instance, but with 's', so we simply add 's' to make the plural: espaguetis, paparazzis. :)

brute June 30, 2009 02:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by poli (Post 40523)
English really botches up Italian too. Have you ever heard of the dish
shrimp scampi?:rolleyes: In the USA, a popular drink is called a latte. It's an espresso with steamed milk combo which I am sure is also available at any Starbucks in the UK too. The reality is that latte means milk-- just milk nothing more in Italian.

Portuguese sounds really nice too, and I am surprized you find it odd-sounding. Brazilian Portuguese is especially nice. Written Portuguese is similar to Spanish, even more similar than Italian.

Yes. We are now infested with coffee houses selling Latte, usually pronounced Lar-tay. Even worse is McDonalds Filet au (French) Fish (English).
I agree with you about Brazilian Portuguese, it sounds much softer on the ear than the European variety, which is full of harsh Zh and Sh sounds and strange unpronoucable nasal diphthongs.


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