"Booklet" is an English equivalent of the Italian word libretto. The masculine singular noun literally translates as "little book" and loosely as "car registration," "Opera text," "passbook (for a bank)," "transaction record," or "vehicle registration certificate." Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "lee-BRET-to" in Italian.
Sometimes it has troubles loading but here is the Italian libretto - I've been using Freetranslation.com to translate what I need
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
"Out" in English is fuori in Italian.
"About" in English is circa in Italian.
"Or" in English is o in Italian.
"Not italian" in English is non italiano in Italian.
The text of an opera is called a "libretto". It often contains both the original text (often in Italian or German) and the translation, commonly in English.
"To have" in English means avere in Italian.
"And you?" in English is E tu? in Italian.
"Who we are" in English is Chi siamo in Italian.
"About me!" in English is Su di me! in Italian.
Questa in Italian is "this" in English.