释义 |
Definition of Italian in English: Italianadjective ɪˈtaljənɪˈtæljən Relating to Italy, its people, or their language. (与)意大利(有关)的;(与)意大利人(有关)的;(与)意大利语(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - Deschamps brought in older players from Italy and also Italian coaches in that first year.
- Joe Jordan was with our party and he is a God in Italy so you had all these Italian fans turning up too.
- The smell of fish sauce sent my head spinning so I was trying to find Italian food instead in Bangkok.
- At last year's summit in Genoa, one protester died in clashes with Italian police.
- A basket of good Italian bread and butter was brought and by the time we'd finished it, our starters had arrived.
- Buffalo milk is also used to produce prized Italian cheese mozzarella.
- I have many friends in Italy and Italian football after playing all those years.
- Neither could speak the language and they struggled to embrace the discipline demanded by Italian clubs.
- He even knows two British guys who run an Italian cookery school in Italy.
- Quicker than a shot of espresso, a Morecambe-based record company has signed up a hot new Italian artist.
- The menu will be a melange of Indian and Italian cuisine and comes with beer.
- He convinced Italian scholars that the language of science need not always be Latin.
- Her death, reportedly with a pink rosary in her hand, was on the front page of every important Italian newspaper.
- It's a surprisingly nice backdrop in which to enjoy Italian classics at bargain prices.
- The under 16s are going on tour to Italy in August where they will be playing two Italian teams.
- On my must-try list are Greek lamb with oregano and lemon, and Italian ricotta tart with a chocolate crust.
- This was originally a warehouse for the storage of ice, owned by Swiss Italian entrepreneur Carlo Gatti.
- Not for nothing do they call Munich the most northerly Italian town, all brio, baroque and bragadoccio.
- He loves his food and I can't cook, so he always finds little Italian delis.
- Afterwards, we retired over the road for a really tragic Italian meal.
noun ɪˈtaljənɪˈtæljən 1A native or inhabitant of Italy, or a person of Italian descent. 意大利人;意大利人后裔 Example sentencesExamples - The Senate majority will be finalised when six seats are decided by votes by Italians living abroad.
- The one thing we have learned is not to underestimate the Italians.
- There was the expected civil disobedience that Italians often have for many of the country's laws.
- The Italians paid the price for their failure to kill the game off when Varga found the target.
- Nor was there any question here of native Italians drafting their own constitution.
- He put pen to paper on a contract with the Italians which expires in June 2007.
- There were two full buses carrying people from all over Europe and another bus of Italians and Germans on its way.
- When the officials weren't hindering them, the laws of physics appeared to defy the Italians.
- The Italians at least showed us what a national anthem should be all about.
- France was rich, Italy poor, so there were plenty of Italians in France trying to make a living.
- How did your performance and that of the other Italians in Sydney affect the sport in Italy?
- The Italians had a great idea when they hit upon the idea of cooking joints of meat and pasta in the same pot.
- He was with the army in the north of Italy when he was taken prisoner by the Italians.
- Facing the opening minutes of the second half without their playmaker didn't faze the Italians.
- In the evening the group joined several hundred young Italians in prayer and song.
- Alessandro was also a firm believer that all Italians should live under Italian rule.
- These joint organizations brought Italians closer and they made more efforts to be active in the community.
- A recent survey showed that half of Italians are unworried by the changeover.
- It should come as no surprise then that the Italians are becoming such fine rugby players.
- It was clear to foreigners and Italians alike that Spain was the dominant power in Italy.
2mass noun The Romance language of Italy, descended from Latin and with roughly 60 million speakers worldwide. It is also one of the official languages of Switzerland. 意大利语(意大利的罗曼语,源自拉丁语,也是瑞士的官方语言之一,全世界范围内大约有6, 000万使用者) Example sentencesExamples - In this period he combined philological studies with the composition of poetry in Latin and Italian.
- The Italian was stretching out his hands and speaking very quickly in Italian.
- Up until then the language of the intellectual elites had in the main been Italian.
- While on the continent he had been learnt French, German and Italian and read widely.
- Australia adopted Italian as the language of coffee, with some English mixed in.
- I have noted elsewhere some examples of translations from French, Spanish and Italian.
- The third book in the treatise was a translation into Italian of one of della Francesca's works.
- Thomas studied several languages on his own, in particular French, English and Italian.
- Again and again he advises his son and subsequently the sons of that son to study French, Italian or German.
- The cabin crew didn't speak Italian very well but they told us to put on our lifejackets.
- By the end of the 15th century it had been translated into German, French, and Italian.
- Then there is Maltese, a form of Arabic with some words taken from Italian.
- Maltese is a Semitic language, with heavy borrowing from Italian and French in vocabulary.
- The French actors spoke French, the Italian actors spoke Italian and the boys spoke English.
- Children will pick up French, English and Italian in this production of song, dance and drama.
- Aside from America, I've always been a fan of Italy, so I'd love to learn to speak Italian.
- One defendant reassured him in his own language, Italian, and he was helped out of a window.
- She had been tutored by John Aylmer and she spoke French, Greek, Latin and Italian fluently.
- Naturally I couldn't say as I don't speak Italian or whatever language they were berating me in.
- The Italians reading this will note how Joe Avati did it by speaking mainly in Italian.
OriginLate Middle English: from Italian italiano, from Italia 'Italy'. Make mine a cappuccino The Italian loves of food, music, and the good life have injected bright colours into English usage. At the other extreme, the Italian language of crime, captured on film and TV, has infiltrated talk of murkier areas of life. IF you want pasta cooked so that it is still firm when you bite into it, you should ask for it to be al dente, literally ‘to the tooth’. Varieties of pasta include fusilli or ‘little spirals’ and penne or ‘quills’—most were unknown in English until the 20th century, but vermicelli or ‘little worms’ and macaroni date back to the 17th century. A determined meat-eater might ask for carpaccio. This name for thin slices of raw meat comes from the surname of the medieval Italian painter Vittore Carpaccio (c.1460–1525/1526), because of his characteristic use of red pigments, resembling raw meat. Baroness Frances Bunsen (1791–1876) was a diplomat's wife who travelled widely. A letter about one of her trips has given us the first mention of the pizza, in 1825: ‘They gave us ham, and cheese, and frittata [a kind of omelette], and pizza.’ The Italian word simply means ‘pie’. Some kinds of Italian food suggest their appeal rather than their look or shape, such as the veal dish saltimbocca, whose name means literally ‘leap into the mouth’. The dessert tiramisu was unknown to English until the 1980s, since when the combination of coffee-and-brandy-soaked sponge and mascarpone cheese has become irresistible. The name comes from tira mi sù ‘pick me up’. After the meal you might have the strong black espresso, whose name comes from caffé espresso ‘pressed-out coffee’, or the milder latte, from caffé latte ‘milk coffee’. A macchiato, espresso with a dash of frothy steamed milk, is short for caffé macchiato, literally ‘stained or marked coffee’. In Italian cappuccino means ‘Capuchin monk’, probably because the drink's colour resembles a Capuchin's brown habit. The Capuchins are a branch of the Franciscan order that takes their name from the sharp-pointed hood worn by the monks—cappuccio in Italian, which is from the same root as cape. It is now found on every high street, but cappuccino has been known in English only since the 1940s. A life of heedless pleasure and luxury is a dolce vita, or ‘sweet life’, a phrase brought into English by the 1960 film La Dolce Vita, directed by Federico Fellini. A lazy person who likes the idea of pleasant idleness is attracted to dolce far niente, literally ‘sweet doing nothing’. The term fresco for a painting done rapidly on wet plaster on a wall or ceiling means ‘cool, fresh’ in Italian. The same word is part of al fresco, meaning ‘in the open air’—in English this phrase tends to refer to eating outdoors, as in this example from GQ magazine: ‘Open 7 days a week…with al fresco dining in fine weather’. The phrase dates back to the 1750s in English and was used by Jane Austen. Sheet music was first printed during the Renaissance by Italians, which is why Italian is the language of musical terms, a number of which have moved into the wider language. We might talk of excitement reaching a crescendo, a word originally used to indicate gradually increasing loudness in a piece of music. Someone might be speaking fortissimo, ‘very loudly’, or sotto voce, ‘in a quiet voice’—literally ‘under the voice’. Italian has also given us the names for different ranges of singing voice, including alto ‘high’, soprano, from sopra ‘above’, and baritone, which is ultimately from Greek barus ‘heavy’ and tonos ‘tone’. Many of the great opera singers have been Italian, and opera itself is the Italian word for ‘work’. Films like The Godfather (1972) and Goodfellas (1990), and the more recent television series The Sopranos, have familiarized us with some of the enigmatic vocabulary associated with the mafia. Members practise omertà, or a code of silence, which is a dialect form of umità ‘humility’. Within the group the adviser to the leader, who resolves internal disputes, is known as the consigliere, literally ‘member of a council’. Presumably it is only after his arts have failed that someone may reach for his lupara, or sawn-off shotgun, a slang term that comes from lupa ‘she-wolf’. A high-ranking member of the Mafia is a don, a word also used for a British university teacher, which comes from Latin dominus ‘master’. See also confetti, fiasco, ghetto, graffiti, inferno, influenza, malaria, pantaloons, paste, tenor
Definition of Italian in US English: Italianadjectiveiˈtalyənɪˈtæljən Relating to Italy, its people, or their language. (与)意大利(有关)的;(与)意大利人(有关)的;(与)意大利语(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - I have many friends in Italy and Italian football after playing all those years.
- Deschamps brought in older players from Italy and also Italian coaches in that first year.
- Joe Jordan was with our party and he is a God in Italy so you had all these Italian fans turning up too.
- The menu will be a melange of Indian and Italian cuisine and comes with beer.
- Neither could speak the language and they struggled to embrace the discipline demanded by Italian clubs.
- He even knows two British guys who run an Italian cookery school in Italy.
- Quicker than a shot of espresso, a Morecambe-based record company has signed up a hot new Italian artist.
- A basket of good Italian bread and butter was brought and by the time we'd finished it, our starters had arrived.
- On my must-try list are Greek lamb with oregano and lemon, and Italian ricotta tart with a chocolate crust.
- It's a surprisingly nice backdrop in which to enjoy Italian classics at bargain prices.
- He loves his food and I can't cook, so he always finds little Italian delis.
- At last year's summit in Genoa, one protester died in clashes with Italian police.
- This was originally a warehouse for the storage of ice, owned by Swiss Italian entrepreneur Carlo Gatti.
- Not for nothing do they call Munich the most northerly Italian town, all brio, baroque and bragadoccio.
- Buffalo milk is also used to produce prized Italian cheese mozzarella.
- The under 16s are going on tour to Italy in August where they will be playing two Italian teams.
- Her death, reportedly with a pink rosary in her hand, was on the front page of every important Italian newspaper.
- He convinced Italian scholars that the language of science need not always be Latin.
- The smell of fish sauce sent my head spinning so I was trying to find Italian food instead in Bangkok.
- Afterwards, we retired over the road for a really tragic Italian meal.
nouniˈtalyənɪˈtæljən 1A native or inhabitant of Italy, or a person of Italian descent. 意大利人;意大利人后裔 Example sentencesExamples - A recent survey showed that half of Italians are unworried by the changeover.
- Nor was there any question here of native Italians drafting their own constitution.
- There were two full buses carrying people from all over Europe and another bus of Italians and Germans on its way.
- There was the expected civil disobedience that Italians often have for many of the country's laws.
- The Senate majority will be finalised when six seats are decided by votes by Italians living abroad.
- France was rich, Italy poor, so there were plenty of Italians in France trying to make a living.
- These joint organizations brought Italians closer and they made more efforts to be active in the community.
- He put pen to paper on a contract with the Italians which expires in June 2007.
- Facing the opening minutes of the second half without their playmaker didn't faze the Italians.
- The Italians paid the price for their failure to kill the game off when Varga found the target.
- The Italians had a great idea when they hit upon the idea of cooking joints of meat and pasta in the same pot.
- The one thing we have learned is not to underestimate the Italians.
- It was clear to foreigners and Italians alike that Spain was the dominant power in Italy.
- How did your performance and that of the other Italians in Sydney affect the sport in Italy?
- The Italians at least showed us what a national anthem should be all about.
- When the officials weren't hindering them, the laws of physics appeared to defy the Italians.
- Alessandro was also a firm believer that all Italians should live under Italian rule.
- In the evening the group joined several hundred young Italians in prayer and song.
- He was with the army in the north of Italy when he was taken prisoner by the Italians.
- It should come as no surprise then that the Italians are becoming such fine rugby players.
2The Romance language of Italy, also one of the official languages of Switzerland. Example sentencesExamples - The Italian was stretching out his hands and speaking very quickly in Italian.
- She had been tutored by John Aylmer and she spoke French, Greek, Latin and Italian fluently.
- Naturally I couldn't say as I don't speak Italian or whatever language they were berating me in.
- The cabin crew didn't speak Italian very well but they told us to put on our lifejackets.
- One defendant reassured him in his own language, Italian, and he was helped out of a window.
- The French actors spoke French, the Italian actors spoke Italian and the boys spoke English.
- Thomas studied several languages on his own, in particular French, English and Italian.
- In this period he combined philological studies with the composition of poetry in Latin and Italian.
- The Italians reading this will note how Joe Avati did it by speaking mainly in Italian.
- Again and again he advises his son and subsequently the sons of that son to study French, Italian or German.
- While on the continent he had been learnt French, German and Italian and read widely.
- Maltese is a Semitic language, with heavy borrowing from Italian and French in vocabulary.
- Aside from America, I've always been a fan of Italy, so I'd love to learn to speak Italian.
- The third book in the treatise was a translation into Italian of one of della Francesca's works.
- Australia adopted Italian as the language of coffee, with some English mixed in.
- Up until then the language of the intellectual elites had in the main been Italian.
- I have noted elsewhere some examples of translations from French, Spanish and Italian.
- By the end of the 15th century it had been translated into German, French, and Italian.
- Children will pick up French, English and Italian in this production of song, dance and drama.
- Then there is Maltese, a form of Arabic with some words taken from Italian.
OriginLate Middle English: from Italian italiano, from Italia ‘Italy’. |