Indosso... . and Sto indossando... . are literal Italian equivalents of the incomplete English phrase "I'm wearing... ." The first example functions as the first person singular of the present indicative -- which translates as "I am wearing," "I do wear," "I wear" -- whereas the second serves as the first person singular of the present progressive, whose rendering into English is the more emphatic "I am wearing," I am busy wearing," I am in the process of wearing." The respective pronunciations will be "een-DOS-so" and "sto EEN-dos-SAN-do" in Italian.
godetevi la vostra nuova casa ** im italian
Gelatina.The G is like the G in God.sources: im learning italian, and google translate.
yo yoy yo ima gangsta im a dddaaaaa the ddda is the ddda drrr frrr
"I'm bored" in Italian can be translated as "Mi annoio."
Giardino is an Italian equivalent of the English word "garden." The masculine singular noun may be used figuratively, literally or symbolically. The pronunciation will be "djar-DEE-no" in Italian.
Im-pi-an
the phrase 'im bored' is taikutsushiteru
Im not sure how to say it, but in Japanese it is 大根
The English phrase "I'm flattered" is translated to Spanish as: "Me halagas."
he speaks english italian and a little bit of spanish - im his cousin
loosely translated....it means im going to hit you.
im Gang is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.