Orgoglio e gioia is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "pride and joy." The phrase models a rare instance when the two languages resemble one another in phrase or sentence structure. The pronunciation will be "or-GO-lyo ey DJO-ya" in Pisan Italian.
"Joy" in English is gioia in Italian.
What joy or what a joy.
"Water of joy" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase acqua di gioia. The pronunciation of the feminine singular prepositional phrase is "A-kwa dee DJO-ya" in Italian.
Gioia di vivere is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "joy of life." The feminine singular noun, dependent preposition, and present infinitive also may be rendered into English loosely as "joy of living." The pronunciation will be "DJO-ya dee VEE-vey-rey" in Italian.
The Christmas song with joy, joy, joy is a German hymn translated into English, How Great Our Joy.
If you mean joy of love in Italian, you could just go onto google translate and select english to italian and type in Joy of love in and it will pop up in italian, if not i have it right here: Joy of Love >>> Gioia dell'amore good luck (:
Abbi is the same in English and Italian. The diminutive serves as an affectionately shortened form of the feminine proper noun Abigaille, which originates in the ancient Hebrew name אֲבִיגָיִל for "Father's joy." The pronunciation will be "AB-bee" in Italian.
"Heavy joy" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase allegro pesante. The masculine singular adjective and feminine/masculine singular adjective/present participle most famously references a style of emphasizing and extending the loud joy of a musical passage by slowing the movement to 60 to 100 beats per minute. The pronunciation will be "al-LEY-gro pey-SAN-tey" in Italian.
Mucha alegría is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "a lot of joy." The feminine singular phrase also translates as "much joy" in English. The pronunciation will be "MOO-tcha-ley-GREE-a" in Uruguayan Spanish.
You're my pride and joy" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Sei il mio orgoglio e la mia gioia.Specifically, the verb sei means "(informal singular you) are." The masculine definite article il means "the." The masculine possessive adjective mio means "my." The masculine noun orgoglio means "pride." The conjunction e means "and." The feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine possessive adjective mia means "my." The feminine noun gioia means "joy."The pronunciation is "she eel MEE-oh ohr-GOH-lyoh eh lah MEE-ah DJOH-yah."
"Pride and joy" is a compound noun, so, in most cases, when it is the subject, you would use have. "Pride and joy have made her cry." If it is the direct object then you use a verb which correlates to the subject. "She has pride and joy over her son's touchdown."
Sei il mio orgoglio e la mia gioia is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You are my pride and joy."Specifically, the verb sei means "(informal singular you) are." The masculine definite article il means "the." The masculine possessive adjective mio means "my." The masculine noun orgoglio means "pride." The conjunction e means "and." The feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine possessive adjective mia means "my." The feminine noun gioia means "joy."The pronunciation is "she eel MEE-oh ohr-GOH-lyoh eh lah MEE-ah DJOH-yah."