Uno cinque is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "1 05." The phrase may refer to a price or time. The pronunciation will be "OO-no TCHEEN-kwey" in Italian.
Orgoglio is one (1) Italian equivalent of the English word "pride." The masculine singular noun also may be translated into English as "hubris" and "self-esteem" according to context. Regardless of meaning, the pronunciation remains "or-GO-lyo" in Italian.
uno due tre quattro cinque
"Basta!" is one (1) Italian equivalent of the English word "Enough!"Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. The particular form is the third person singular of the present indicative of the infinitive "bastare." The pronunciation is "BAH-stah."
Numero uno is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "number one." The masculine singular phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular il since Italian employs definite articles where English does not use "the."
Cuoio is an Italian equivalent of the English word "leather." The masculine singular noun also may be translated into English as "hide." The pronunciation will be "KWA-yo" in Italian.
puoi rilassarti (refers to 1 person) - potete rilassarvi (refers to more than 1 person)
L'ho fatto! and Sì! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I did." Context makes clear whether "I did it!" (case 1) or "Yes!" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "lo FAT-to" and "see" in Pisan Italian.
Un terzo is an Italian equivalent of the English word "one-third (1/3)." The masculine singular cardinal number/indefinite article and noun also translate into English as "a third." The pronunciation will be "oon TER-tso" in Italian.
"A master" is an English equivalent of un maestro. The masculine singular phrase also may mean "one (1) master." The pronunciation will be "oon MEYE-stro" in Italian.
Comare and madrina are Italian equivalents of the English word "godmother." Context makes clear whether informality (case 1) or formality (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ko-MA-rey" and "ma-DREE-na" in Italian.
I numeri da uno a cento is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the numbers from 1 to 100." The phrase models a rare instance of English and Italian phrase or sentence structure resembling one another most recognizably. The pronunciation will be "ee NOO-mey-ree da OO-no a TCHEN-to" in Pisan Italian.
Ballando and ballare are Italian equivalents of the English word "dancing." Context determines whether a literal but less common equivalent (case 1) or a more Italian equivalent translated as "to dance" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "bal-LAN-do" and "bal-LA-rey" in Pisan Italian.