You can use "Salve" and "Buongiorno" considering that the last one is more formal
Octōber, as the eighth month (octavus mensis), in Latin and ottobre in Italian are Roman equivalents of the English name "October." The respective pronunciations will be "ak-TO-ber" in Latin and "ot-TO-brey" in Italian.
Sabrina is the same in English and Italian. The pronunciation of the feminine proper noun -- whose origins clearly connect with the ancient Roman name for England's River Severn and whose translation into English may be "boundary" -- will be "sa-BREE-na" in Italian.
I don't believe there is a language called "Roman". In Italian, which they speak currently in Rome, it is la sorella. For sisters, it's le sorelle. In Latin, which they used to speak in Rome, I think it is soror
Giano is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Janus." The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- whose origins go back to the two-faced Roman god of beginnings and endings -- will be "DYA-no" in Italian.
"Roman" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Romano. The masculine proper noun serves as an identification of a person from Rome or as an individual's forename or surname. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "ro-MA-no" in Italin.
Ovid is an Italian Poet. 250 Can be translated into roman numerals.
If by "Roman" you mean the language of ancient Rome, you want the Latin word spes (a 5th-declension feminine noun, genitive spei).If by "Roman" you mean the language of modern Rome, you want the Italian word (la) speranza.
Lucrezia is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Lucretia".Specifically, the name is a feminine proper noun. It may originate from the Roman name Lucretius, from the Latin lucrum for "profit, wealth". Or it may originate from the north Italy's ancient Etruscan language. The pronunciation will be "loo-KRET-tsa" in Italian.
Gatte Romane in the feminine and Gatti Romani in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Roman Cats." The choice depends upon whether the cats in question are all female (in the first case) or either all-male or mixed female and male (in the second). The respective pronunciations will be "GAT-tey ro-MA-ney" and "GAT-tee ro-MA-nee" in Italian.
The term llorare translated in English means donkey. It is a word that has its origins in ancient languages such as Greek, Roman, and Egyptian languages.
"Grandma" and "ninth" are English equivalents of the Italian word nona. Context makes clear whether the feminine singular noun represents a local diminutive for nonna("grandmother"), an ordinal number, or -- with the initial letter capitalized -- one of the three Fates in Greco-Roman mythology. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "NO-na" in Italian.
Similar to the English word "hail" it was a form of greeting, much like hello.