Fare muu or muggire as the verb and muu as the noun are Italian equivalents of the English word "moo".
Specifically, the present infintive fare is "to do, to make". The masculine noun muu means "moo". The present infinitive muggire translates as "to make cow-like sounds, to moo".
The pronunciations will be "FA-re moo" and "mood-DJEE-re" for the infinitives and "moo" for the noun.
Grandi muscoli is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "big muscles." The pronunciation will be "GRAN-dee MOO-sko-lee" in Italian.
"Walls" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word mura. The feminine plural noun in question also translates into English as "ramparts." The pronunciation will be "MOO-ra" in Italian.
"The muses" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase le muse. The feminine plural phrase nevertheless may be translated into English as merely "muses" since English and Italian have different perspectives on definite articles. The pronunciation always will be "ley MOO-zey" in Italian.
Mutaforme and mutatori di forma are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "shape shifters." The two options literally translate as "change forms" and "changers of form" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "MOO-ta-FOR-mey" and "MOO-ta-TO-ree dee FOR-ma" in Italian.
Mutande is an Italian equivalent of the English word "underpants." The feminine plural noun in question may reference either feminine or male underwear. The pronunciation will be "moo-TAN-dey" in Italian.
(Il) dramma musicale is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "musical drama." The pronunciation of the phrase -- which literally translates as "the musical drama" -- will be "eel DRAM-ma MOO-zee-KA-ley" in Italian.
Comunità is an Italian equivalent of the English word "community." The feminine singular noun may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or the indefinite una ("a," "an"). The pronunciation will be "ko-MOO-nee-TA" in Italian.
Musei is the Italian equivalent of the English word "museums." The masculine plural noun may be preceded by the masculine plural definite article i ("the") or indefinite/partitive dei ("some"). The pronunciation will be "moo-SAY-ee" in Italian.
The singular premurosa and the plural premurose in the feminine and the singular premuroso and the plural premurosi in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "caring." The above-mentioned examples indicate a major difference between English and Italian, with the latter requiring knowledge of the gender and number of people involved in order to find the exact adjectival match. The respective pronunciations will be "PREY-moo-RO-sa" and "PREY-moo-RO-sey" in the feminine and "PREY-moo-RO-so" and "PREY-moo-RO-see" in the masculine in Italian.
Ho perso le mutande is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I lost my underclothes." The declarative statement translates literally as "I have lost the underclothes" in English. The pronunciation will be "oh PER-soh ley moo-TAN-dey" in Italian.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
Saluti comuni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "basic greetings." The masculine plural noun and adjective translate literally as "common greetings." The pronunciation will be "sa-LOO-tee ko-MOO-nee" in Italian.