Lorenzo de' Medici (1449-1492) was the de facto ruler of the Florentine Republic in the time of the Italian Renaissance. He was known to Florentines as Lorenzo il Magnifico, Lorenzo the Magnificent. He was a patron of scholarship and the arts and managed to keep a fragile peace between competing Italian states such as Venice and the Papal States. He ruled over a time known to Italians as the Golden Age.Within 2 years of his passing, the peace beween the Italian states came to an end, and shortly after that the French invaded Naples, beginning a period of occupation by France, Spain, or Austria for nearly four centuries.
King Sennacherib
the were all absolute monarchs
to unite Italian states into a single nation.
The Italian renaissance was a period of time (1330-1550) In Italy. It was the rise of Humanism.
"Magnificent" in English is magnifico in Italian.
Siamo magnifici
"I am just Enzo the magnificent!" in English is Sono solo Enzo il magnifico! in Italian.
Magnifica is an Italian equivalent of the English word "magnificent."Specifically, the Italian word is the feminine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "mah-GNEE-fee-kah." The masculine form, magnifico, is pronounced "mah-GNEE-fee-koh."
Magnifico. Sfarzoso. Splendido
Lorenzo de' Medici (January 1, 1449 - 9 April 1492) was an Italian statesman and ruler of the Florentine Republic during the Italian Renaissance. Known as Lorenzo the Magnificent(Lorenzo il Magnifico) (Wikipedia)
Magnifica in the feminine and magnifico in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "magnificent".Specifically, the Italian words are adjectives in their singular form. The feminine form will be pronounced "ma-NYEE-fee-ka" in Italian. The pronunciation of the masculine form will be "ma-NYEE-fee-ko".
Che magnifico! in the masculine and Che magnifica!in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "How magnificent!"Specifically, the exclamatory che means "what." The masculine adjective magnifico the feminine magnificamean "magnificent." The pronunciation is "keh mahg-NEE-fee-koh" in the masculine and "keh mahg-NEE-fee-kah" in the feminine.
Il quadro è magnifico! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "The painting is magnificent!"Specifically, the masculine definite article il means "the." The masculine noun quadro means "painting." The verb è means "(it) is." The masculine adjective magnificomeans "magnificent."The pronunciation is "eel KWAH-droh eh mahg-NEE-fee-koh."
Cibo magnifico is an Italian equivalent of 'magnificent food'. The masculine noun 'cibo' means 'food'. The masculine adjective 'magnifico' means 'magnificent'. Together, they're pronounced 'CHEE-boh mahg-NEE-fee-koh'.
"Magnificent" is an English equivalent of the Italian word magnifica.Specifically, the Italian word is the feminine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "mah-GNEE-fee-kah." The masculine form, magnifico, is pronounced "mah-GNEE-fee-koh."
Lorenzo de' Medici (1449-1492) was the de facto ruler of the Florentine Republic in the time of the Italian Renaissance. He was known to Florentines as Lorenzo il Magnifico, Lorenzo the Magnificent. He was a patron of scholarship and the arts and managed to keep a fragile peace between competing Italian states such as Venice and the Papal States. He ruled over a time known to Italians as the Golden Age.Within 2 years of his passing, the peace beween the Italian states came to an end, and shortly after that the French invaded Naples, beginning a period of occupation by France, Spain, or Austria for nearly four centuries.