Specifically sheep, Jenny. Bovine cows. My countrymen make hardy and willing sheep. Ovine. In Italiano, You can say someone is mansueto/mansueta - domesticated, a subtle way of calling them a sheep.
That's the way to do it. But not in the places the tours go. In each city find a little hole in the wall place then ask the waiter: "Per favore qual è la specialità [speh-chee-ah-lee-taa] della casa? Then when s(he) tells you, say: "va bene per me [meh]".
I have long wanted to take a donkey and walk through Italy from North to South, eating all of the way.
Sadly, my grandfather forbade me to learn to speak Italian when I was four. (My great-grandmother, great-aunts, and my grandfather spoke it in front of me continually when I was a small child.)
I think Ovine means grass eaters? Sheep/cows etc.
Specifically sheep, Jenny. Bovine cows. My countrymen make hardy and willing sheep. Ovine. In Italiano, You can say someone is mansueto/mansueta - domesticated, a subtle way of calling them a sheep.
My Italian should be better since we travel there all the time.........good restaurant Italian.
Grazie
Prego
Vin, I’d love to eat my way through Italy!
That's the way to do it. But not in the places the tours go. In each city find a little hole in the wall place then ask the waiter: "Per favore qual è la specialità [speh-chee-ah-lee-taa] della casa? Then when s(he) tells you, say: "va bene per me [meh]".
I’ll have to memorize that in case I’m ever so fortunate to visit there🙂
I have long wanted to take a donkey and walk through Italy from North to South, eating all of the way.
Sadly, my grandfather forbade me to learn to speak Italian when I was four. (My great-grandmother, great-aunts, and my grandfather spoke it in front of me continually when I was a small child.)