T maiuscole is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "capital T." The feminine singular noun and feminine/masculine singular adjective may be rendered additionally into English as "majuscule T" and "upper-case T." The pronunciation will be "tea meye-OO-skoo-ley" in Italian.
tv is tv The pronunciation is not as in English, instead it is usually pronounced 't vuu'
J'espère vous voir bientôt.
Terra is an Italian equivalent of the English word "earth." The feminine singular noun references the planet or the soil when beginning respectively with a capitalized or small-letter "t." The pronunciation will be "TER-ra" in Italian.
Io ti amo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I heart you!" The English phrase originates from the T-shirts that show the subject pronoun "I" before, and the object pronoun "you" after, a heart for "I love you!" The pronunciation will be "EE-o tee A-mo" in Pisan Italian.
A-t-il? in French is "Has he?" in English.
Patrizio is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Patrick".Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun. It originates in the Latin name Patricius for "nobleman, patrician". The pronunciation will be "pa-TREE-tsyo" in Italian.
"Is there?" in English is Y a-t-il? in French.
Benoît is a French equivalent of the Italian name Benedetto. The respective pronunciations of the masculine proper nouns -- whose English translation is "Benedict" -- will be "buh-nwa" in French and "BEY-ney-DET-to" in Italian.
In English isn´t good No Balance
"See you soon! Thanks for everything!" is an English equivalent of the mixed French and English phrase À bientôt! Grazie di tutto! The first two words in French translate literally into English as "until soon" whereas the last three words are in Italian for "Thank you for everything!" The pronunciation will be "a bya-to GRA-tsyey dee TOOT-to" in French and Italian.
"what can I do for you / for your service?"
how many [the things you have to count] are there?