"Live music" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase la musica viva.
Specifically, the feminine singular definite article lameans "the." The feminine noun musica means "music." The feminine adjective viva means "alive, live."
The pronunciation is "lah MOO-zee-kah VEE-vah."
La musica è vita is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Music is life." The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which does not translate la ("the") for musica and does not include it for vita -- will be "la MOO-zee-ka eh VEE-ta" in Italian.
Long live the music
"Viva la musica en los corazon" translates to "Long live the music of the heart."
Musica Viva Australia was created in 1945.
"Long live Mickey Mouse!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Viva Topolino! The interjection and masculine proper name translate literally into English as "Long live little mouse!" The pronunciation will be "VEE-va TO-po-LEE-no" in Italian.
Micheal Practorius composed Viva La Musica
Viva Roma! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Long live Rome!" The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase in the third person singular of the present imperative will be "VEE-va RO-ma" in Italian.
Vive! is a French equivalent of the Italian word Viva! The respective pronunciations of the interjection -- which translates literally as "(Long) live!" -- will be "veev" in French and "VEE-va" in Italian.
"Long live Espa!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Viva Espa! The exclamation and the proper name reference verbally enthusiastic support for an individual whose surname is thought by etymologists and genealogists to represent an ancient Sardinian variant on Vespa ("wasp"). The pronunciation will be "VEE-va EH-spa" in Italian.
"Alive for now!" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Viva per ora! The pronunciation of the feminine singular adverbial phrase -- which also translates as "Live for now!" in the second person formal/third person informal singular of the present imperative -- will be "VEE-va pey-RO-ra" in Italian.
It can be translated to english as followed. Live the independence or freedom.
Evviva! is just one Italian equivalent of the English word "Yay!"Specifically, the word is an exclamatory interjection of approval or enthusiasm. It is formed by combining the conjunction e ("and") and the imperative viva ("Long live..."). The pronunciation will be "ev-VEE-va" in Italian.