Yes, you can use 'denaro' as an uncountable noun, although it is countable when it means a kind of ancient coin. E.g. Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver=Giuda tradì Gesù per 30 denari.
A synonym is soldi: un soldo, due soldi. Therefore money is both soldi and denaro, but in some idioms, you do not have a choice, e.g. to make money is fare soldi, 'fare denaro' would not be used. 'fare denari' would be more correct because we are alluding figuratively to the coins, so the plural is needed, but it is rarely said too.
"Money" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "denaro."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "del" ("some").The pronunciation is "deh-NAH-roh."
la conoscenza ed il denaro sono insieme
Vuoi denaro? and Volete denaro? are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Do you want money?" Context makes clear whether one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "vwoy dey-NA-ro" in the singular and "vo-LEY-tey dey-NA-ro" in the plural in Pisan Italian.
- For The Roman denarius see the link.- For the Italian denaro (unit of mass): 1 Italian denaro = 1,10-1,25 g = 0,00242-0,00275 pounds
The masculine singular nouns argento as "silver" and denaro as "money" are Italian equivalents of the French masculine singular noun argent. The respective pronunciations will be "ar-DJEN-to" and "dey-NA-ro" in Italian and "ar-zhaw" in French.
"I don't have a penny." = Non ho un centesimo.(nohn oh oon chen-tez-ee-moh)
Arthur Denaro was born on 1948-03-23.
Aimee Denaro was born in Huntington, in New York, USA.
Matteo Messina Denaro was born on 1962-04-26.
Albert Raymond Denaro has written: 'Fundamentals of radiation chemistry' -- subject(s): Radiochemistry
yes but to much denaro lot of work yes but to much denaro lot of work
Victor F. Denaro has written: 'The houses of Valletta' -- subject(s): Buildings, structures, Historic buildings, Streets