Ben marcato in Italian means "well marked" in English.
Bien marqué is a French equivalent of the Italian phrase ben marcato. The adverb and masculine singular adjective/past participle translate into English as "well marked." The pronunciation will be "bya mar-key" in French and "ben mar-KA-to" in Italian.
"Well said" in English means ben detto in Italian.
Ben fatto, fratello!
"Although" is an English equivalent of the Italian word benché.Specifically, the word is a conjunction. It also may be translated as "though". The pronunciation will be "ben-KEY"* in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English interjection "Hey!"
'ben' means 'good' or 'well' - so 'ben marcato' means 'well marked' Basically, the composer doesn't want you to hold back on the marcato.
Benvenuta, bella! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Wecome, beautiful" The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "BEN-vey-NOO-ta BEL-la" in Italian.
"Well done" or "well made" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase ben fatto.Specifically, the adverb ben means "well." The masculine singular form of the past participle, fatto, translates as "done, made." The pronunciation is "behn FAHT-toh."
Lavoro ben fatto! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "job well done." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "work well made" in English. The pronunciation will be "la-VO-ro ben FAT-to" in Italian.
Mino is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Ben." The diminutive serves as an affectionate nickname for Beniamino ("Benjamin"), whose origins trace back to the ancient Hebrew בִּנְיָמִין (benyamîn, "son of my right hand"). The pronunciation will be "MEE-no" for the nickname and "BEH-nya-MEE-no" for the forename in Italian.
Benzina is an Italian equivalent of the English word "petrol." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun -- which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite (la, "the") or indefinite (della, "some") articles -- will be "ben-DZEE-na" in Italian.
Ben fatta, sorella! in the feminine and Ben fatto, sorella! in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Well done, sister!" The choice depends upon whether the reference is to something which the Italian language considers as feminine or masculine in gender, with masculine prevailing in such a situation as this. The respective pronunciations will be "ben FAT-ta so-REL-la" and "ben FAT-to so-REL-lo" in Italian.
"Welcome, parents!" in English is Benvenuti, genitori! in Italian. The masculine plural greeting represents a rare instance where English and Italian phrase or sentence structure resemble one another most clearly. The pronunciation will be "BEN-vey-NOO-tee DJEY-nee-TO-ree" in Italian.