niente
In Italian, "nada" translates to "niente" in both Portuguese and Spanish.
It can be translated to english as followed. Than nothing or never-mind.
The Italian equivalent of the Portuguese and Spanish phrase 'de nada' translates as the following: di niente. The Italian pronunciation is the following: Dee ni-EHN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'di' means 'from' or 'of'; 'niente' 'nothing'. The equivalent in English is translated as the following: 'You're welcome'; 'No problem'; 'It's nothing'; and 'Don't mention it'. In all four languages, the phrase may be in response to being thanked.
Amigo in Spanish is amico in Italian.
¡De nada, chico! in Spanish means "You're welcome, boy!" (literally, "From nothing, boy!") in English.
José in Spanish means Giuseppi in Italian.
DE nada means "you're welcome" or "no problem" in Spanish. It is translated literally as "of nothing." however, d nada I am not sure of.
Marcos in Portuguese and Spanish is Marco in Italian.
Manuel in Portuguese and Spanish is Manuele in Italian.
Felicia in Italian and Spanish is Félicie in French.
"Isabella" in English and Spanish is Isabella in Italian.
¡De Nada! buongiorno. oh wait that's Italian ;)