Benedicati, padre! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Bless thee, father!" The greeting also translates literally as "Bless you, father!" in English. The pronunciation will be "BEY-ney-DEE-ka-tee PA-drey" in Pisan Italian.
"Bless you!" in English is Dio ti benedica! and, after a sneeze, Salute! in Italian.
Dio benedica la nostra casa
The word 'bless' when translated to Indonesian is memberkati.
Che Dio ti benedica. "Dio la benedica". "Dio la benedica".
Salute is an Italian equivalent of the English word "health."Specifically, the word functions as a feminine noun in its singular form. It literally means "health, well-being." It also translates as "Bless you!" for a sneeze and "Cheers!" for a toast.Whatever the meaning, the pronunciation remains "sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
"Hello! How are you doing?" in English is Ciao! Come stai? to someone familiar, and Ciao! Come sta? to someone unfamiliar, in Italian.
"Bless you!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Benedicite!Specifically, the present imperative benedici means "bless." The personal pronoun te translates as "(informal singular) you." The pronunciation will be "BEY-ney-DEE-tchee-tey" in Italian.
Dio li benedica! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "God bless them!"Specifically, the masculine noun Dio is "God". The personal pronoun li means "them". The verb benedicatranslates as "bless".The pronunciation will be "DEE-o lee BEY-ney-DEE-ka" in Italian.
Benedica questa casa! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Bless this house!"Specifically, the imperative benedica is "Bless!" The feminine demonstrative adjective questa means "this". The feminine noun casa translates as "home, house".The pronunciation will be "BEY-ney-DEE-kah KWE-stah KAH-sah" in Italian.
Dio ti benedica in the singular and Dio vi benedica in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "God bless." The blessing uses the second person informal singular for one "you" in the first instance and the second person informal plural for one "you" idiomatically and "you all" grammatically. The respective pronunciation will be "DEE-o tee BEY-ney-DEE-ka" in the singular and "DEE-o vee BEY-ney-DEE-ka" in the plural in Italian.
Che Dio ti benedica!is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "May God bless you!"Specifically, the conjunction che is "that". The masculine noun Dio means "God". The personal pronoun timeans "(informal singular) you". The verb benedica translates as "may bless".The pronunciation will be "key DEE-oh tee BEY-ney-DEE-kah" in Italian.
In Rome they speak Italian. The Italian word for bless you is "Salute," meaning "health."