How to say "foot cream" in Italian?

In Italian "foot cream" translates to  crema per i piedi 

Transliteration: kre-ma per ee pee-eh-dee

🇮🇹 Uso una crema per i piedi perché diventano secchi in estate.

🗣️ Oo-soh oo-nah kre-ma per ee pee-eh-dee per-keh dee-ven-tah-noh sek-kee een eh-stah-teh.

🇺🇸 I use a foot cream because they become dry in the summer.



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🇮🇹

Italian

Native speakers
64M 🗣️
Official language in
Italy 🌍
Active vocabulary
20k-30k 📚
Difficulty
medium 🤔
Closest langauges
Spanish, French
⏳ Avg. time to basics
600-750 hours ⏳

Why learn Italian?

Learning Italian offers enriched cultural experiences and economic opportunities in sectors like fashion, automotive, and food industries. Italy is a founding EU member with a diverse and rich heritage, making the language valuable for history, art, and culinary enthusiasts. For basic fluency, English speakers need about 1,500-2,000 vocabulary words and can expect to invest 600-750 hours for general proficiency. Italian grammar essentials include the use of articles ('il', 'la'), understanding gender (masculine, feminine), and mastering verb conjugations across various tenses like presente and passato prossimo. Though challenging, these grammatical intricacies enable precise, expressive communication in both professional and social settings.



Frequently Asked Questions

How to say "foot cream" in Italian?

You can use the word "crema per i piedi" which translates to "foot cream".

How to pronounce "crema per i piedi" (foot cream) in Italian?

The word "crema per i piedi" is pronounced as "kre-ma per ee pee-eh-dee".

Do you have an audio recording on how to pronounce" crema per i piedi" (foot cream) in Italian?

Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.