I was hoping to go for fornato, meaning ‘cooked in the oven’, but it doesn’t seem to exist, so I’ll go for
formato, Italian for format
I was hoping to go for fornato, meaning ‘cooked in the oven’, but it doesn’t seem to exist, so I’ll go for
formato, Italian for format
format, English for format
I was hoping you’d say that.
Fermat
fermato (which was stopped, Italian)
fermata Fermata - Wikipedia
Formata
“Catch your enemies by surprise, until they take a position and build a shield wall, provoke them to mess up the ranks, surround them and destroy completely! Catch up with those who run away and kill them all, because if you do not, they will return back with a sword in a hand!”
Forata (holed, Italian)
frata
Faroese, (vulgar) to fart
(Pardon me!)
Also:
Norwegian Bokmål, to deprive (someone) of (something)
Frate (friar, Italian)
prate
brate (German: fry (imperative as well as first person singular))
brave
brav (German: well-behaved, obedient – a typical “false friend” word for English learners of German and vice versa )
Bravo (“good” referred to a person in Italian and “congratulations” in several languages)
brazo (arm, branch, Spanish)
Brano (song, Italian, not the most common way but it’s not a rare word)
Bruno typically a pet name for a bear
bruto (brute, Italian)
Bluto
bluzo (blouse, Esperanto)