Bella da guardare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful to look at." The prepositional phrase translates literally into English by word order as "beautiful from watching." The pronunciation will be "BEL-la da gwa-DA-rey" in Italian.
"You look so sexy!" in English is Sembri così sexy! in Italian.
Donna di bell'aspetto! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Good-looking woman!" The compliment translates literally as "woman of beautiful appearance" and loosely as "woman with (a) beautiful look" in English. The pronunciation will be "DON-na dee BEL-la-SPET-to" in Pisan Italian.
Sembrai bella, mami! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You look beautiful, Mommy!"Specifically, the present indicative verb sembrai is "(informal singular you) are looking/seeming, do look/seem, look/seem." The feminine adjective bella means "beautiful." The feminine noun mami translates as "Mommy."The pronunciation will be "SEM-breye* BEL-la MA-mee" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
Kamu terlihat cantik.
"To look for them" in English is Cercarli in Italian. The word represents the merger of the present infinitive cercare("to look for," "to search for") with the plural direct object pronoun li. The pronunciation will be "tcher-KAR-lee" in Italian.
Sei bellissima! and Stai bellissima! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You look lovely!" Birthplace, context and personal preference determine whether "You're very beautiful!" (case 1) or "You're most beautiful (in this special instance)!" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciation will be "sey bel-LEES-see-ma" and "steye bel-LEES-see-ma" in Pisan Italian.
puoi guardare ma non puoi toccare
"My heart floats to the heavens when I look upon you!" in English is Il mio cuore tocca il cielo quando ti vedo! in Italian.
Sembri sexy! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You look sexy!" The compliment may be made to either a female or male since sexy is a feminine and masculine-gendered English loan word. The pronunciation will be "SEM-bree SEH-ksee" in Italian.
"I'm looking" is an English equivalent of the Italian word Cerco. The first person singular present indicative also translates into English as "I am looking (seeking, trying)," "I do look (seek, try)," or "I look (seek, try)" according to context. The pronunciation will be "TCHER-ko" in Italian.
il mio dizionario You could also use a translation website to look this up
Guarda cosa mi ha portato Babbo Natale!