Dove sta la chiesa cattolica? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Where is the Catholic church?" The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase in the present indicative will be "DO-vey sta la KYEH-za kat-TO-lee-ka" in Italian.
"Church" in English means chiesa in Italian.
"Small church" in English means piccola chiesa in Italian.
La chiesa in Italian means "the church" in English.
Cattedrale Chiesa
"We missed you in church today" in English is Ci siete mancati in chiesa oggi in Italian.
John Wycliffe was dissident Catholic back in the 14th century, he translated that Bible into English and, in general, wrote against the Catholic Church. Martin Luther was a dissident in the 16th century who left the Catholic Church as a heretic and apostate and translated The Bible into German.
Arcivescovile is an Italian equivalent of the English word "archiepiscopal." The feminine/masculine singular adjective relates to the Church's archbishop or archbishopric. The pronunciation will be "AR-tchee-VEY-sko-VEE-ley" in Italian.
catholic
The English Catholic Church is just that, a Catholic Church in union with the pope in Rome. It is no different from any Catholic Church elsewhere in the world except that the language used is English. While the Church of England (Anglican Church) claims to be "Catholic" they are not in union with the pope in Rome so are considered as a Protestant denomination and not Catholic.
It's Roman Catholic
Grazie! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you!" Benigne serves as the Latin equivalent. The respective pronunciations will be "GRA-tsyey" in Italian and "beh-NIHG-ney" in classical Latin and "beh-NEE-nyey" in Church Latin.
Andiamo alla chiesa! and Andiamo in chiesa! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Let's go to church!" Context makes clear whether a specific church (case 1) or not (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "an-DYA-mo AL-la KYEH-za" and "an-DYA-mo een KYEH-za" in Italian.