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Does anyone speak italian?

2007-09-10 12:23:51 · 11 answers · asked by ilovesoccer 1 in Society & Culture Languages

11 answers

Saturday is "sabato"
On saturday remain sabato
example:
Will reach on Saturday at 11 p.m : Arrivo sabato alle 23.00.
I'll see you on saturday : Ci vediamo sabato

Ciao, hope it helps

2007-09-10 21:00:50 · answer #1 · answered by Angie 7 · 2 0

Is "questo sabato" Italian isn't Spanish and French combo, is a Romance language that derives from the Latin as Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese and Romanian.

Yeah, right, you are Italian and you call your self Italien, testa de minja, andiamo, Italian, Spanish and French have their own characteristics, but not because you gonna make Italian as a combo of French and Spanish, these 3 languages were growing simultaneously. If you are Italian you should appreciate more your language and culture.

2007-09-10 12:36:25 · answer #2 · answered by Javy 7 · 0 0

Yes, I do speak italian and the other answerer is right, saturday is SABATO in italian.....

If something is going to happen that day, you would still say sabato depending on the context....... "Ci vediamo sabato" means "see you on Saturday"........ If you want to say "Do you like Saturday?" you would say "Ti piace il sabato??".....

Ciao!

2007-09-10 12:33:43 · answer #3 · answered by Lprod 6 · 1 0

il sabato only means saturday if I'm not mistaken. On saturday is probably somethning like questo sabato (or this coming saturday).

2007-09-10 12:35:02 · answer #4 · answered by Rossonero NorCal SFECU 7 · 1 0

You can use: sabato/di sabato/il sabato
- "sabato" (without preposition), when you refer to next saturday: eg Sabato vado al mare (more or less =I will go to the seaside next Saturday).
Whereas you mean you are used to go to the seaside on saturday, you should say "vado al mare di/il sabato"

- "il sabato" or "di sabato" eg Open on saturday = Aperto il sabato.

2007-09-11 02:58:59 · answer #5 · answered by ? 7 · 1 0

If you say, let's meet on saturday, you can simply say "incontriamoci sabato", ie. there's no need to use the article.

2007-09-10 13:09:24 · answer #6 · answered by Luciano D. 7 · 3 0

Saturday In Italian

2017-02-25 10:48:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Happy Birthday: Buon compleanno Roman: BeouN ***-plee-annno Thanks: Grazie Roman: Grrrray-zee. This is how it is spoken in Italian.

2016-05-21 09:09:30 · answer #8 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

quoting lupita: "ITALIEN IS A COMBO OF SAPNISH &FRENCH "
learn your own language before critizizing others!!!!

anyway getting back to what you asked: it's '(di) sabato"

2007-09-10 21:16:12 · answer #9 · answered by Alessandro 3 · 1 2

il sabato

if you need any other translations, here's the site

http://babelfish.altavista.com/tr

2007-09-10 12:33:45 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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