Liana
Colite (koo-lee-taa)
NAH - poe - lee (spelled Napoli)
Pollici is an Italian equivalent of the English word "thumbs." The pronunciation of the masculine plural noun will be "POL-lee-tchee" in Italian.
"Angelic" is an English equivalent of the Italian word angelica. The pronunciation of the feminine singular adjective will be "an-DJEH-lee-ka" in Italian.
"Hill" in English is collina in Italian.
Catalina is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Katelynn." The pronunciation of the feminine proper noun will be "KA-ta-LEE-na" in Italian.
Regali is an Italian equivalent of the English word "presents." The masculine plural noun also translates as "gifts" in English. The pronunciation will be "rey-GA-lee" in Italian.
Grandi muscoli is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "big muscles." The pronunciation will be "GRAN-dee MOO-sko-lee" in Italian.
Fratelli is a literal Italian equivalent of the English word "brothers." The pronunciation of the masculine plural noun will be "fra-TEL-lee" in Italian.
Maialina in the feminine and maialino in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "piglet." Both examples may be rendered literally into English as "little pig." The respective pronunciation will be "MEYE-a-LEE-na" and "MEYE-a-LEE-no" in Italian.
Pulire is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to clean." The present infinitive also may be translated into English as "to scrub (polish, tidy up, wash, wipe)" depending upon context. The pronunciation remains "poo-LEE-rey" in Italian.
Il libro is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the book." Italian uses definite articles where English does not employ "the" so it is possible that the masculine singular phrase also may be translated as "book" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "eel LEE-bro" in Pisan Italian.