Dove si prende il treno is an Italian equivalent of 'Where do you catch the train'. The words in Italian are pronounced 'DOH-veh see PREHN-deh eel TREH-noh'.
In the word by word translation, the adverb 'dove' means 'where'. The reflexive 'si' means 'oneself'. The verb 'prende' means '[he/she/it] catches, does catch, is catching'. The masculine definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'treno' means 'train'.
Dove andiamo? is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Where are we going?" The interrogative preposition and present indicative verb in the first person plural also may be translated literally into English as "Where do we go?" The pronunciation will be "DO-ve an-DYA-mo" in Italian.
"Where is the station?" in English is Dov'è la stazione?in Italian.
"Are you going to be present for...?" in English is Sarai presente a...? in Italian.
Andando in Italian means "going" in English.
Andate! in Italian means "Go!" or "You're going" in English.
"You are going to the supermarket" in English is Tu stai andando al supermercato in Italian.
"Dove stai andando?"
Cosa succede? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What is going on?" The interrogative in the third person singular of the present indicative also may be translated into English as "What's happening?" The pronunciation will be "KO-sa soot-TCHEH-dey" in Italian.
Andiamo a suonare! in Italian means "We're going to play (instruments)!" in English.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
"About" in English is circa in Italian.
"Out" in English is fuori in Italian.
"Or" in English is o in Italian.
"You are going to have a wonderful school year!" in English is Stai per avere un meraviglioso anno scolastico! in Italian.