Il fine is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the end".
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article ilmeans "the". The masculine noun fine translates as "end". The pronunciation will be "eel FEE-ney" in Italian.
No, il finito is not the Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the end." The masculine singular definite article and adjective/past participle/pronoun instead translate literally into English as "the finite" or "the finished" depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "eel fee-NEE-to" in Italian.
Bella fine! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Beautiful ending!"Specifically, the feminine adjective bella means "beautiful". The feminine noun fine translates as "end, ending". The pronunciation will be "BEL-la FEE-ne" in Italian.
Attardarsi is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to linger".Specifically, the present infinitive attardare* means "to delay". The reflexive pronoun si translates as "her/him/it/oneself". The pronunciation will be "AT-tar-DAR-see" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a pronoun is added to the end of the present infinitive form of the verb.
"To not understand you" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Non capirte.Specifically, the adverb non is "not" in English. The infinitive capire* means "to understand" in English. The personal pronoun te translates as "(informal singular) you" in English.The pronunciation will be "NOHN kah-PEER-tey" in Italian.*The vowel e drops when the personal pronoun is added to the end of the infinitive form of the verb.
Domandarsi su is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to wonder about".Specifically, the present infinitive domandare* is "to ask". The reflexive pronoun si means "oneself" in this context. The preposition su translates here as "about".The pronunciation will be "DO-man-DAR-see soo" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a pronoun is added to the end of the present infinitive.
Buon fine settimana! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Have a great weekend!"Specifically, the masculine adjective buono* is "good, nice, great". The masculine noun finemeans "end". The feminine noun settimana translates as "weekend".The pronunciation will be "bwohn FEE-ney SEHT-tee-MAH-nah" in Italian.*The final vowel drops before a noun which begins with a consonant.
"End" in English is fine in Italian.
L'amore non finisceis an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Love does not end".Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il* is "the". The masculine noun amore means "love". The adverb non means "not". The verb finiscetranslates as "does finish, finishes, is finishing".The pronunciation will be "la-MO-rey non fee-NEE-shey" in Italian.*The vowel drops and an apostrophe follows the remaining letter l when the next word begins with a vowel.
Sentirsi felice is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to feel happy".Specifically, the present infinitive sentire* means "to feel". The reflexive pronoun si means "oneself". The feminine/masculine adjective felice translates as "happy".The pronunciation will be "sen-TEER-see fe-LEE-tche" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a an object or reflexive pronoun is added to the end of the infinitive.
Grazie per amarmi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you for loving me".Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The preposition per means "for". The present infinitive amare* means "to love". The personal pronoun mi translates as "me".The pronunciation will be "GRAH-tsyey peh-rah-MAHR-mee" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a pronoun is affixed to the end of the present infinitive.
"A hug" and "one hug" are English equivalents of the masculine singular phrase un abbraccio written at the end of a text message in Italian. "(See you) soon!" is one English equivalent of the adverbial phrase a presto.
Ciao, Bello is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, Beautiful man."Specifically, the greeting ciao can begin and end an interaction. The masculine adjective/pronoun bello means "beautiful, good-looking, gorgeous, handsome." The pronunciation is "tchow* BEHL-loh."*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "chow."
"Big lies" is an English equivalent of the Italian word bugiani.Specifically, the Italian word is formed from the feminine noun bugia, which means "lie". It has added to the end the plural suffix -oni, which means "big". The pronunciation will be "boo-DJYAH-nee" in Italian.