You searched for: “italian
Italian
Names of months and days in Italian.
This entry is located in the following unit: Calendar, Month and Day Names in Different Languages (page 1)
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Units related to: “italian
(Greek > Latin [a hollow, deep sound, a humming, a buzzing] > Italian [explosive shell]: booming, humming sound)
(Month and Day Names)
(Italian: very small or from Spanish, "beak, tip, very small"; and from Latin, beccus, beak; also, a decimal prefix used in the international metric system for measurements)
(Greek > Italian: change; a fee charged by money brokers [changers] for exchanging money)
(Greek balaustion > Latin balaustium: supporting post of a railing on a balcony, staircase, etc. Borrowed from Italian balaustro, from balaustra; so called because of the resemblance of a baluster to the double-curving calyx tube of the "wild pomegranate flower".)
(Modern Latin: chemical element; named in honor of Enrico Fermi, an Italian-American physicist; rare earth)
(from Proto-Germanic -iskaz, Vulgar Latin -iscus, Italian -esco, and then French -esque: a suffix forming adjuectives and indicating "resemblance, style, manner, or distinctive character, etc., of")
(Named after the Italian physician and physicist who investigated the nature and effects of what he conceived to be electricity in animal tissue; who in 1762 discovered and first described voltaic electricity; electric currents; and primarily, direct electrical current.)
(Latin > Italian: a suffix; seashore; pertaining to the seashore)
(Latin: specter, witch, mask, nightmare > Italian mascera > French, masque [covering to hide or to protect the face])
(Latin > Italian: a person skilled in one of the fine arts, especially in music)
Word Entries containing the term: “italian
Italian (Italiano) days
lunedì (Monday)
martedì (Tuesday)
mercoledì (Wednesday)
giovedì (Thursday)
venerdì (Friday)
sabato (Saturday)
domenica (Sunday)
This entry is located in the following unit: Calendar Names of Days and Months in Different Languages (page 5)
Italian (Italiano) months
gennaio (January)
febbraio (February)
marzo (March)
aprile (April)
maggio (May)
giugno (June)
luglio (July)
agosto (August)
settembre (September)
ottobre (October)
novembre (November)
dicembre (December)
—Based on information from

Mediterranean Europe Phrasebook by Sally Steward;
Lonely Planet Publications; Hawthorn, Vic, Australia; 1992.

Collins Italian Gem Dictionary by Isopel May;
Collins Publications; London and Glasgow 1962.

International Dictionary in 21 Languages, by H.L. Ouseg,
Philosophical Library; New York 1962.

This entry is located in the following unit: Calendar Names of Days and Months in Different Languages (page 5)
A unit at Get Words related to: “italian
(Italian, "chatter, prattle" > French: deceive, deceiver; swindle, swindler; fraud, quack, chiseler)
(Italian developed from Latin and the following words came into English from Italian; most of which were derived from Latin)