Goditi il bel tempo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Enjoy your beautiful weather!" The pronunciation of the present imperative phrase in the second person informal singular -- which translates "your" by making the verb reflexively "Enjoy (for) yourself the beautiful weather" -- will be "GO-dee-teel bel TEM-po" in Italian.
"How is the weather?" in English is Che tempo fa? in Italian.
tempo
Tempo in Italian means "tempo," "time" or "weather" in English.
"Umbrella" in English is ombrello in Italian.
Fa freddo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "The weather is cold!" The statement translates literally as "It makes cold!" in English. The pronunciation will be "fa FRED-do" in Pisan Italian.
Dinamiche e tempo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "dynamics and tempo." The phrase also translates as "dynamics and time" or "dynamics and weather" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "dee-NA-mee-key TEM-po" in Italian.
"How is the weather?" in English is Quel temps fait-il?in French.
Tiempo is a Spanish equivalent of the Italian word tempo. The masculine singular noun numbers among its many translations into English "time" and "weather." The respective pronunciations will be "TYEM-po" in Spanish and "TEM-po" in Italian.
"How is the weather today?" in English is Quel temps fait-il aujourd'hui? in French.
Tempo italiano is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italian weather".Specifically, the masculine noun tempo means "time" or "weather" depending upon context. The masculine adjective italiano translates as "Italian". The pronunciation will be "TEM-po EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
aujourd'hui est un beau jour (if you get married today) une belle journée (if the weather is fine)
"(Grammatical) tense," "pace," "rhythm," "time," and "weather" are English equivalents of the Italian and Portuguese word tempo. The above-mentioned form serves as a masculine singular noun in both languages. The respective pronunciations will be "TEM-po" in Italian and "TEM-poo" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese.