the Anglo-Italian cup
Paul Gascoigne played for a while...
Owen Hargreaves Kevin Keegan
Soccer is played at Connections, in a soccer field, and any other places where soccer is played.
the English invented soccer
1863 the English found soccer
"Soccer" in English is calcio in Italian.
No it is English
"Soccer fan" in English means tifosa for a female and tifoso for a male in Italian.
"Soccer" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "calcio."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). The pronunciation is "KAHL-tchyoh."The English loan word "football" also may used to mean "soccer." In such a case, the game of football that is not soccer and that is played in the United States of America is called "il football americano."
Gol nel calcio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "soccer goal." The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "goal in the soccer (game)" in English. The pronunciation will be "gol nel KAL-tcho" in Pisan Italian.
different teams and it's no different to English and Finnish Soccer
The same as you play english football
Calcio is the Italian word for football (soccer). From the Italian verb calciare - to kick.
Il calcio mi piace piuù di tutti is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I like soccer the best." The declarative/exclamatory statement translates as "The soccer please me more than everything (everybody, everyone)!" in English. The pronunciation will be "eel KAL-tcho mee PYA-tchey pyoo dee TOOT-tee" in Italian.
When translated from Portuguese (not Italian)to English, it means "What is the most famous brazilian (soccer) team in the world?"
"I played soccer" is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'ai joué au foot. The sentence also translates as "I've played soccer" or "I have played soccer" in English. the pronunciation will be "zeh zhwey o foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
Calcio outside the United States of America and football inside are Italian equivalents of the English word "football." The masculine singular nouns may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The respective pronunciations will be "KAL-tcho" elsewhere in the world (where soccer aka football is played) and "foot-BAL" for the non-soccer sport of the USA.