Trattoria
KOH-ree is an Italian pronunciation of 'Corey'. The name isn't native to Italy. In the Italian language, an ending that sounds like 'ee', as in Corey', tends not to be written as such. Instead, a more popular Italian spelling of that sound is the letter 'i'.
Certamente is an Italian equivalent of the English word "definitely".Specifically, the word is an adverb. It is formed by adding the adverbial ending --menteto the feminine adjective certa ("certain, definite"). The pronunciation will be "TCHER-ta-MEN-tey" in Italian.
Giovannino is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Little John".Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun. The first part, Giovanni, means "John". The ending --inotranslates as "dear, little, sweet". The pronunciation will be "DJO-va-NEEN-no" in Italian.
I don't know the word itself as a French word, but it must be something to do with happiness (felicite, in French). The 'a' ending almost suggests an Italian word.
"Really crazy person" is an English equivalent of "pazzone."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine singular noun. It combines the masculine singular noun "pazzo" ("lunatic, madman") with the suffix ending "-one" ("big"). The pronunciation is "pahts-TSOH-neh."
Roncato
Irks
Ending
Lyceum
another word for NEEDED starting with a D is dependable.
ullage
another word for slip starting with e ending with n
despises
soot
The -tti ending on words in Italian is "little" in English.
The ending -mente is an Italian equivalent of the English suffix "-ly." The ending signals that the part of speech is an adverb. The pronunciation will be "MEN-tey" in Pisan Italian.
A circle has no starting or ending point of a circle. Hope this helps!