Examples of using "Italiano" in a sentence and their english translations:
Speak Italian!
Do you speak Italian?
Do you speak Italian?
- Do you speak Italian?
- Do you know Italian?
Have you been speaking Italian?
- He is an Italian.
- He's Italian.
He speaks Italian.
- I'm Italian.
- I am Italian.
You speak a perfect Italian.
Can you count in Italian?
Isn't he Italian?
Do you speak Italian?
Is he Italian?
Do you speak Italian?
Can you also count in Italian?
He is Italian by birth.
- He is an Italian.
- He's Italian.
I already speak Italian.
- Do you speak Italian?
- Do you know Italian?
Isn't he Italian?
Excuse me, do you speak Italian?
I don't speak Italian.
- I'm Italian.
- I am Italian.
He is a teacher of the Italian language.
I want to improve my Italian.
I come from Italy and I speak Italian.
Can you also count in Italian?
I love Italian food.
His mother speaks Italian.
Can you also count in Italian?
It's an Italian name.
Now I am very interested in the Italian Renaissance.
Welcome to our first class in Italian.
Tom wants to eat Italian food today.
You're Italian.
- I know a good Italian restaurant.
- I know of a good Italian restaurant.
He likes Italian food.
I feel like speaking Italian!
I love my Italian dialect.
I'm proud to be an Italian.
I come from Italy and I speak Italian.
Rafaela is an Italian name.
Mario is an Italian citizen.
My Italian is terrible.
- I speak only Italian.
- I only speak Italian.
That Italian author is little known in Japan.
- The foreigner does not have an Italian name.
- The foreign woman does not have an Italian name.
I want Italian dressing on my salad.
I'm Italian, and I love beauty.
Italy is called "Italia" in Italian.
How do you say "të lutem" in Italian?
How do you say that in Italian?
The Italian food was delicious.
Tom seldom eats Italian food.
Sangiovese is an Italian wine.
How do you say "pasta" in Italian?
How do you say "pizza" in Italian?
Is my Italian so bad?
Tom likes Italian food.
This sentence is not in Italian.