The a would be make the sound "uh". And the i would would make the sound of a long "E".
In Latin, "geography" is pronounced as "geographia." The "ge" is pronounced like "gay," the "o" is a short vowel sound, and the "ph" is pronounced as an "f." The emphasis typically falls on the second syllable, making it sound like "gay-oh-GRAF-ee-ah."
According to the Reconstructed Pronunciation, nox was in classical times pronounced "nocks", with a short o (for many American readers, this is the "ou" in "fought," not the "o" in "box"). The same pronunciation is acceptable in Church Latin.
The correct spelling is vowels, letters that are pronounced by exhalation, classically A, E, I, O, and U.
It is pronounced "ECK-kay."
In classical Latin, the letter c was always pronounced "hard" - like k. So "Caesar" was pronounced Kai-sar, not See-zar as it is today. The combination "sc" was always pronounced "sk" in Latin.
In ecclesiastical or italianate Latin it is pronounced "soos-chi-pay". In classical Latin it is pronounced "soos-kee-pay"
Mostly English. Possibly Latin or French. It depends on the date.
'Vox' is the Latin equivalent of 'voice'. According to the classical Latin of the ancient Romans, it's pronounced wohks. According to liturgical Latin, it's pronounced vawks.
campione
In Latin it is pronounced (lee-bra).
Your question implies that there is only one diphthong in classical Latin. There are actually six:ae is pronounced as in English highau is pronounced as in English howei is pronounced as in English dayeu is pronounced e-uoe is pronounced as in English boyui is pronounced u-i
Adolf is pronounced with a short a. Ah-dolf.