[Io] tornero is an Italian equivalent of 'I'll be back'. The phrase is pronounced '[EE-oh] tohr-neh-ROH'. The subject pronoun 'io' means 'I'. It doesn't have to be used, because the verb identifies the subject as the first person singular. The verb 'tornero' means '[I] will be back'.
Torno subito! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I'll be right back!" The promise translates literally as "I'm returning immediately!" in English. The pronunciation will be "TOR-no SOO-bee-to" in Pisan Italian.
Mi metterò torna a voi
"My father is very ill" in English is Il mio padre è molto malato in Italian.
"Demented" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word dementi. The feminine/masculine plural adjective also may be rendered into English as "insane," "mad," or "mentally ill." The pronunciation will be "dey-MEN-tee" in Italian.
Grazie is thank you. Not sure of ill see you then but see you later would be; A dopo.
Malato is an Italian equivalent of the English word "ill."Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "mah-LAH-toh." The feminine form, malata, is pronounced "mah-LAH-tah."
"Ill," "sick" or "unwell" are English equivalents of the Italian word malato.Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "mah-LAH-toh." The feminine form, malata, is pronounced "mah-LAH-tah."
I am ill can be translated as:Ich bin krank
Well, it was in the movies (In Japan). And I translated it, and came up to. Arceus: To the Conquering Space-Time.
Andrea doria
ill wait for you
ill be back on Christmas Day
"Bad (wrong)" as an adjective, "badly (incorrectly, poorly, wrongly) as an adverb, and "evil (damage, ill, illness, sickness, wrong)" as a noun are literal English equivalents of the French word mal. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation remains "mahl" in French.
IL DIVO is italian, which means divine male performer.