dieta
diet
Origin: From Greek diaita (way of life, regimen); borrowed into Latin and then Italian. The political sense (a national assembly) derives via German Diet.
Also means
parliament; assembly
Usage Note
Dieta most commonly means a weight-loss or medical eating regimen: essere a dieta (to be on a diet). A false friend alert: in Italian dieta does NOT usually mean 'what you generally eat' the way 'diet' does in English — for that, say alimentazione or regime alimentare. The political sense (a legislative assembly, such as the Japanese Diet) is a separate, rarer usage.
Examples
"Il medico le ha consigliato una dieta mediterranea."
Natural Translation
The doctor recommended a Mediterranean diet to her.
Related Words
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