"You're ugly!" in English is Sei brutta! to a female and Sei brutto! to a male in Italian.
"Ugly" in English means brutto (for a male ) or brutta (for a female) in Italian.
Sono brutta! in the feminine and Sono brutto! in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I'm ugly!" Context makes clear which choice suits. The respective pronunciations will be "SO-no BROOT-ta" in the feminine and "SO-no BROOT-to" in the masculine in Italian.
Uomo brutto is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "ugly man." The masculine noun and adjective also translates as "homely man" in English. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo BROOT-to" in Italian.
"Ugly lamp" in English is lampe laide in French.
"Your mom is ugly!" in English is Ta maman est laide! in French.
"Sturdy little bowl" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Catinaccia. The surname represents the combination of the Latin word catīna ("bowl") and the pejorative suffix -accia ("plain," "simple," "ugly"). The pronunciation will be "KA-tee-NAT-tcha" in Italian.
Ugly can be 'minikui,' written in Japanese: 醜い
C'est moche! in French is "It's ugly!" in English.
Brutta donna is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "ugly woman." The feminine singular adjective and noun model an exception -- that for emphasis -- to the general Italian rule of having modifiers follow -- not precede -- what they describe. The pronunciation will be "BROOT-ta DON-na" in Italian.
Est-il moche? in French is "Is he ugly?" in English.
I said you're not ugly
The singular Che brutta! or the plural Che brutte!in the feminine and the singular Che brutto! or the plural Che brutti! in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "How ugly!" Context makes clear which form suits even though newbie language-speakers tend to opt for the masculine singular no matter what. The respective pronunciations will be "key BROOT-ta" or "key BROOT-tey" in the feminine and "key BROOT-to" or "key BROOT-tee" in the masculine in Italian.