"Now you" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase adesso tu. The adverb and second person informal singular pronoun may be heard said to someone within the speaker's close circle of family, friends, and peers. The pronunciation will be "a-DES-so too" in Italian.
Now you is an English equivalent of 'Adesso tu'. The adverb 'adesso' means 'now, even'. The personal pronoun 'tu' means 'you'. Together, they're pronounced 'ah-DEHS-soh too'.
siamo amici adesso
Adesso in Italian means "now" in English.
"Where are you now?" in English is Dove sei adesso? in Italian.
"Can you rest now?" in English is Puoi riposare adesso?in Italian.
Parliamo domani! Ciao per adesso! in Italian means "Let's talk tomorrow! Bye for now!" in English.
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'.
Sono a casa adesso.
Adesso mi conosci.
"And you?" in English is E tu? in Italian.
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 want to sleep now" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Adesso voglio dormire.Specifically, the adverb adesso means "now." The verb voglio means "(I) am wanting/wishing, do want/wish, want/wish." The infinitive dormire means "to sleep."The pronunciation is "ah-DEHS-soh VOH-lyoh dohr-MEE-reh."
"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.
"You are happy!" in English is Tu sei felice! in Italian.