¿Qué? Pero... is a Spanish equivalent of the Italian phrase Che? Ma... . The two phrases translate literally as "What? But... ." in English. The respective pronunciations will be "key PEY-ro" in Uruguayan Spanish and "key ma" in Italian.
"But what (magic) spells!" is one literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ma che magie! The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "ma key* MA-djyey" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Hey!"
Ma di che? in Italian means "But what?" in English, if you say it as you say "prego" you can translate it in "you're welcome"
Papavero is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish word amapola. The masculine singular noun in Italian and the feminine singular noun in Spanish translate to English as "poppy." The pronunciation will be "Pa-pa-VEY-ro" in Italian and "A-ma-POZH-zha" in Argentinian Spanish, "A-ma-POSH-sha" in Uruguayan Spanish, and "A-ma-POY-ya" in Spanish elsewhere.
Massa is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish word masa. The feminine singular noun translates into English as "mass." The pronunciation will be "MAS-sa" in Italian and "MA-sa" in Spanish.
"Before that" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase pria che. The phrase represents a shortened form of prima che and translates also as "first" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "PREE-a key" for the shortened form and "PREE-ma key" for the full form in Pisan Italian.
"Voglio imparare la lingua italiana, ma questa è l'unica frase che io conosca!"
Ma is one Italian equivalent of the English word "but."Specifically, the word functions as a conjunction. It also may be translated as "however." The pronunciation will be "ma" in Italian."ma"
Primavera is an Italian and a Spanish equivalent of the English word "spring." The feminine singular noun may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la since Italian and Spanish employ "the" where English does and does not do so. The pronunciation will be "PREE-ma-VEY-ra" in Italian and in Spanish.
Matilde is the same in Italian and Spanish. The pronunciation of the feminine proper name -- whose origins trace back to the Germanic Mahthildis ("strong female warrior") -- will be "ma-TEEL-dey."
"Female ape" is an English equivalent of the Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish word macaca. The feminine singular noun also may be found translated into English with the French loan word macaque. The pronunciation will be "ma-KA-ka" in Italian and Spanish and "muh-KA-kuh" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese.
Lama is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish word (and Spanish loan word in English) llama. The pronunciation of the word -- which may be preceded by the masculine singular definite (il, "the") or indefinite (un, "a, one") articles -- will be "LA-ma" in Italian.
si sapeva quello che aveva, ma non avete mai solo pensato che la perderà is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.