different between verdi vs cavatina

verdi

Esperanto

Verb

verdi (present verdas, past verdis, future verdos, conditional verdus, volitive verdu)

  1. (intransitive) to be green
    Ne facilas verdi.
    It's not easy being green.

Conjugation

Related terms

  • verda (green)
  • verde (greenly)
  • verdo (the color green)

French

Verb

verdi m (feminine singular verdie, masculine plural verdis, feminine plural verdies)

  1. past participle of verdir

Anagrams

  • vider

Guinea-Bissau Creole

Etymology

From Portuguese verde. Cognate with Kabuverdianu verdi.

Adjective

verdi

  1. green

Italian

Adjective

verdi m pl

  1. plural of verde

Noun

verdi m

  1. plural of verde

Kabuverdianu

Etymology

From Portuguese verde.

Adjective

verdi

  1. green

Norwegian Bokmål

Noun

verdi m (definite singular verdien, indefinite plural verdier, definite plural verdiene)

  1. (a) value

Derived terms


References

  • “verdi” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??r?di?/

Noun

verdi m (definite singular verdien, indefinite plural verdiar, definite plural verdiane)

  1. (a) value, worth

Derived terms


Etymology 2

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??æ?r?/

Noun

verdi f

  1. (non-standard since 2012) definite singular of verd

References

  • “verdi” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

Turkish

Verb

verdi

  1. past definite third-person singular of vermek

verdi From the web:

  • what verdict
  • what verdict does the jury return
  • what verdict means
  • what verdict does the jury deliver
  • what verdict did janie get
  • what verdict today
  • what verdict was reached today
  • what verdict is about to be announced


cavatina

English

Etymology

From Italian cavatina, diminutive of cavata.

Noun

cavatina (plural cavatinas)

  1. (music) An operatic song in slow tempo, either complete in itself or (e.g., in Bellini and Verdi) followed by a faster, more resolute section: hence
  2. (music) A rather slow, song-like instrumental movement; the title, for example, of a movement in Beethoven's string quartet in B flat, op. 130 (1826) and of a once-famous piece (originally for violin and piano) by Raff, and of the slow movement of Rubra's string quartet No. 2.

Translations

See also

  • aria

cavatina From the web:

  • cavatina meaning
  • what does cavatina mean in english
  • what is cavatina music
  • what is cavatina food
  • what does cavatina mean in italian
  • what does cavatina mean in music
  • what is cavatina all about
  • what is cavatina cabaletta
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like