i love you so much
but is just like friends.
"Bene" is a prefix, not a suffix. It means good, well.
Good
From what I've learned, in Italian mitica means legendary, mythical, great, and as an exclamation/slang it means awesome like for ex.: "miticaaaaaa, stupenda canzone! Mi piace molto!" or "Awesomeeeeee, wonderful song! I really like it!"
you are very sweet
Bene, grazie, e tu [or Lei] is an Italian answer to the question 'How are you'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'bene' means 'well'. The interjection 'grazie'means 'thank you'. The conjunction 'e' means 'and'. The personal pronouns 'tu' and 'Lei' mean 'you'. The word 'tu' is the form that's used within an individual's close circle of family and friends. The word 'Lei' is the form that's used with an individual who's senior in age or position, or who isn't part of that close, familial and friendly circle. The phrase is pronounced 'BEH-nay GRAH-tsee-ay ay too [lay]'.
Molto Gentile is Italian for very kind.
Molto espressivo is Italian for very expressive.
In the Italian language, the word bene means something is good or okay. The phrase Mono bene means very good.
it means "Live well, laugh often, love much"
it means OKAY in Italian
I think 'tutto bene' is Italian for: 'All's well' or 'it's all good'.
Non bene is an Italian equivalent of 'not well'. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The adverb 'bene' means 'well'. Together, they're pronounced 'nohn BEH-neh'.
it means very cold its about the weather
"Benjamin" in English is Beniamino in Italian.
Translated directly from Italian - it reads 'Thanks a lot my boys'
"I'm much better without you." It's Italian.
Molto is an Italian equivalent of the French word très.Specifically, the French and the Italian words are adverbs. They mean "very". The pronunciation will be "MOHL-toh" in Italian and "treh" in French.