Unlike in English, in Italian, adjectives usually come after the noun they're describing.
Dove sono le tue scarpe vecchie?
Where are youroldshoes?
La zuppa ha un gusto strano.
The soup has astrangetaste.
Adjectives also change their endings depending on the noun they go with.
singular
plural
il ragazzo alto
i ragazzi alti
la ragazza alta
le ragazze alte
Un buon cane
We've seen that in Italian most adjectives follow the noun they're describing. There are a few adjectives, though, that can come either before or after the noun. Nuovo is one of these.
È il divano nuovo.
It is thenewcouch.
Ho un nuovo paio di calze.
I have anewpair of stockings.
Another example is buono, but there's one little thing you need to remember. When buono comes before a noun, it drops the final ‑o and it becomes buon.
È un cane buono.
It is agooddog.
È un buon cane.
It is agooddog.
Caro mio
Here's one more Italian word with two meanings! Caro means both expensive and dear.