What does incremento in Italian mean?

What is the meaning of the word incremento in Italian? The article explains the full meaning, pronunciation along with bilingual examples and instructions on how to use incremento in Italian.

The word incremento in Italian means increase, increase, boost, increase in sales, population increase, population growth. To learn more, please see the details below.

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Meaning of the word incremento

increase

sostantivo maschile (aumento, ampliamento)

(noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.)
La vendita di aria condizionata ha visto un incremento in questi ultimi anni.
Sales of air conditioners have seen an increase in recent years.

increase, boost

verbo transitivo o transitivo pronominale (ampliare)

(transitive verb: Verb taking a direct object--for example, "Say something." "She found the cat.")
Non credo che incrementare la spesa annuale sia la risposta giusta.
I don't think increasing the annual expenditure is the right answer.

increase in sales

(noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.)

population increase, population growth

(noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.)

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Do you know about Italian

Italian (italiano) is a Romance language and is spoken by about 70 million people, most of whom live in Italy. Italian uses the Latin alphabet. The letters J, K, W, X and Y do not exist in the standard Italian alphabet, but they still appear in loanwords from Italian. Italian is the second most widely spoken in the European Union with 67 million speakers (15% of the EU population) and it is spoken as a second language by 13.4 million EU citizens (3%). Italian is the principal working language of the Holy See, serving as the lingua franca in the Roman Catholic hierarchy. An important event that helped to the spread of Italian was Napoleon's conquest and occupation of Italy in the early 19th century. This conquest spurred the unification of Italy several decades later and pushed the language of the Italian language. Italian became a language used not only among secretaries, aristocrats and the Italian courts, but also by the bourgeoisie.