Piccola macchina rossa is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "small red car." The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite (la, "the") or indefinite (una, "a, an") articles -- will be "PEEK-ko-la MAK-kee-na ROS-sa" in Italian.
Macchina in Italian means "car" in English.
"Shifter" in English is frizione for a car's clutch and macchinista for a stagehand in Italian.
Carrozza in Italian means "carriage," "coach," or "train car" in English.
"I've got a posh car!" in English is Ho una macchina elegante! in Italian.
Ho avuto bisogno dell'auto ieri! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I needed the car yesterday!" The declaration translates literally as "I had need of the car yesterday!" in English. The pronunciation will be "o a-VOO-to bee-ZO-nyo del-LOW-to YEH-ree" in Pisan Italian.
Fiat is a loan Italian acronym and car name in English. The acronym stands for Fabrica Italiana Automobili di Torino. It translates literally as "Italian Factory of Cars of Turin," a city in northern Italy.
"The Seat" -- in regard to the Spanish car -- is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il seat. The pronunciation will be "eel sey-a" or "eel sey-at" depending upon the speaker's birthplace.
Caralina (car-a-li-na) its usally a girls name instead of a pet name
L'auto ha una gomma a terra is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "The car has a flat tire." The pronunciation of the feminine singular declarative clause in the third person singular -- which translates literally as "The car has a tire to (the) ground" -- will be "LOW-to a OO-na GOM-ma TER-ra" in Italian.
Hai un'auto? and Avete un'auto? are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Do you have a car?" Context makes clear whether one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "eye oo-NOW-to" in the singular and "a-VEY-tey oo-NOW-to" in the plural in Pisan Italian.
Pilota o conducente is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "pilot or driver." The phrase references the "driver" of a plane and of an unspecified vehicle (including bus, car, train, or truck). The pronunciation will be "pea-LO-ta o KON-doo-TCHEN-tey" in Italian.
Auto, automobile, autovettura and macchina are Italian equivalents of the English word "car." Birthplace, context and personal preference determine whether "auto" (case 1), "automobile" (example 2), "autowagon" (instance 3) or "machine" (option 4) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "OW-to," "OW-to-MO-bee-ley," "OW-to-vet-TOO-ra" and "MAK-kee-na" in Pisan Italian.