Filide and Fillide are Italian equivalents of the English name "Phyllis." The feminine proper noun in question originates in the Greek Φυλλίς for "foliage." The pronunciation will be "FEE-lee-dey" and "FEEL-lee-dey" or "fee-LEE-dey" and "feel-LEE-dey" depending upon the speaker's birthplace.
"Otto" is one English equivalent of the Italian name Eude.Specifically, the name functions as a masculine proper noun. It traces its origins to the German name Otto (and its many variants), which means "wealthy." The pronunciation will be "ey-OO-dey" or "OO-dey" depending upon the speaker's birthplace.
Abadula Gemeda from Ethiopia
Abadula Gemeda from ethiopia
A native English speaker.
The singular deliciosa and the plural deliciosasin the feminine and the singular delicioso and the plural deliciosos in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "delicious." The choice depends upon the gender and number being considered "delicious." The respective pronunciations will be "DEY-lee-THYO-sa" ("DEY-lee-SYO-sa" in Latin America) and "DEY-lee-THYO-sas" ("DEY-lee-SYO-sas") in the feminine and "DEY-lee-THYO-so" ("DEY-lee-SYO-so") and "DEY-lee-THYO-sos" ("DEY-lee-SYO-sos") in the masculine in Spanish.
Décide! in the informal singular and Décidez! in the formal singular/informal plural are French equivalents of the English word "Decide!" The respective pronunciations in French will be "dey-seed" for "You decide!" and "dey-see-dey" for "You decide!" or "You all decide!"
DVD is the same in English and in French. The digital video disc serves as a masculine noun whose common abbreviation has one form in the singular and in the plural. The pronunciation will be "dey-vey-dey" in French.
Désordre is a literal French equivalent of the English word "disorder." The pronunciation of the masculine singular noun will be "dey-sord" in northerly French and "dey-sor-druh" in southerly French.
Denise is the same in English and French. The pronunciation of the feminine proper noun -- which originates as the feminine form of the name of the Greek wine-god Διονυσιος (Dionysios) -- will be "dneeze" and "dey-neez" depending upon the speaker's birthplace.
DVD is a French equivalent of the English word "DVDs." The masculine noun takes one form in French whereby the singular and the plural respectively are differentiated by the masculine singular definite article le, as in le DVD, and by the masculine plural definite article les, as in les DVD. The pronunciation will be "luh dey-vey-dey" in the singular and "ley dey-vey-dey" in the plural in French.
"Big ten" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase grande diez. The adjective and number also may be rendered into English as "great ten (10)." The pronunciation will be "GRAN-dey dyess" in Latin America and "GRAN-dey dyeth" in Spain.