Parliamo domani! Ciao per adesso! in Italian means "Let's talk tomorrow! Bye for now!" in English.
Adesso in Italian means "now" in English.
"Where are you now?" in English is Dove sei adesso? in Italian.
Sono a casa adesso.
"Can you rest now?" in English is Puoi riposare adesso?in Italian.
Adesso is an Italian equivalent of 'now'. It's an adverb that's pronounced 'ah-DEHS-soh'. But the Italian equivalent of 'nowadays' is 'oggigiorno', which literally means 'today['s] day'.
Adesso mi conosci is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Now you know me." The pronunciation will be "a-DES-so mee ko-NO-shee" in Italian.
"I'm going to spank you!" in English is Adesso ti sculaccio! ("Now I'm spanking you!") or Sto per sculacciarti! ("I'm about to spank you!") in Italian.
"I want you now" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ti voglio adesso. The phrase most famously references a release by the Genoa-based new wave, synthpop musical group Matia Bazar of 1975 onward. The pronunciation will be "tee VO-lyo a-DES-so" in Italian.
Now I'm very tired. I hope we'll talk tomorrow.
Sono malata adesso in the feminine and Sono malato adesso in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I am sick." Context makes clear whether the speaker is female (case 1) or male (example 2). The respective pronunciations will be "SO-no ma-LA-ta-DES-so" in the feminine and "SO-no ma-LA-to a-DES-so" in Italian.
Mi sento male adesso! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Now I am sick!" The declarative/exclamatory statement translates literally as "I feel badly now!" in English. The pronunciation will be "mee SEN-to MA-ley a-DES-so" in Italian.
Adesso mi conosci.