"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.
"You did" in English is Hai fatto! in Italian.
"We had to..." in English is Abbiamo dovuto... in Italian.
Questa in Italian is "this" in English.
"Who we are" in English is Chi siamo in Italian.