Is "Tramonti" Italian? I'm not sure. I went to google translate, wrote "Tramonti" and it was translated as "sunsets". I know that "Tramonto" is "sunset".
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1how come you write it with a capital T?– Walter TrossFeb 6, 2015 at 12:37
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3“Tramonti” is also a toponym; there are three “comuni” so named: Tramonti (Salerno), Tramonti di Sopra and Tramonti di Sotto (Pordenone). The origin is of course “tra monti”, that is, “between mountains”. As a curiosity, Tramonti di Mezzo also exists, midway from Tramonti di Sotto and Tramonti di Sopra, but is a “frazione” of the former.– egreg ♦Feb 6, 2015 at 14:14
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7If you know that there's a word ("tramonto") and even if you're unsure that there's such a word, the right way to check all its forms is to look up in a dictionary (and to see immediately that "tramonti" is the plural form). Please next time first look up the word in a dictionary, and only if it doesn't answer your question, ask on Italian SE. Thank you for your collaboration.– I.M.Feb 7, 2015 at 7:57
1 Answer
That's correct: "tramonti" is the plural of "tramonto".
Most nouns with an "-o" ending will change it to "-i" to indicate plural.
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6@Tia27, since you are here to learn Italian, the correct form is “molte grazie”.– DaGFeb 6, 2015 at 9:03