Gesù Cristo è il Signore is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Jesus Christ is Lord." The declarative statement in question translates literally as "Jesus Christ is the Lord" since Italian precedes nouns with definite articles where English often does not. The pronunciation will be "djey-ZOO KREE-sto eh eel see-NYO-rey" in Italian.
Gesù Cristo is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Jesus Christ." The refers to Jesus of Nazareth, son of Our Lady Mary and grandson of Joachim and Anne. The pronunciation will be "djey-ZOO KREE-sto" in Italian.
Ti amo, Gesù! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love you, Jesus!" The declarative/exclamatory statement also translates literally as "I do love you, Jesus!" in English. The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo djey-ZOO" in Italian.
Gesù is the Italian equivalent of the English name "Jesus." The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- which most famously references Jesus of Nazareth (6 B.C. - A.D. 29), around whom Christian denominations center their belief systems and religious practices -- "djey-ZOO" in Italian.
In Italian, it is Gesù (JeZOOOO).
Gesù is a literal Italian equivalent of the English name "Jesu." The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- which most famously links with Jesus of Nazareth (7 - 2 B.C. - A.D. 30 - 33) -- will be "djey-SOO" in Italian.
Gesu Cristo.
It is not proper Italian, but it can be interpreted as a dialectal/slang exclamation, where marone means Madonna (the Virgin Mary) in some Italian regions (especially the Naples/Campania region). It is similar to the "Jesus!" exclamation in English.
The translation for the English word Jesus Christ into the Igbo language is Jesu Kristi.
Although it is not proper Italian, it could be interpreted as a dialectal/slang exclamation, where maron refers to the Madonna (the Virgin Mary), used in some Italian regions (especially the Naples/Campania region). It is similar to the "Oh Jesus!" exclamation in English.
She is a stong beliver in Jesus Christ.
イエス: Iesu
"Christopher" in English is Χριστόφορος ("the one who holds Jesus").