"Small town" in English is piccola città in Italian.
Sciara, a small town in the Sicilian province of Palermo, is the same in Italian and English.
D'Asti in Italian means "from (the town of) Asti" in English.
Paesana in Italian means "countrywoman (from the same province or town)" in English.
Siena is the same in Italian and English. The proper noun of place refers to an historic town in northwest peninsular Italy. The pronunciation will be "SYEH-na" in Italian.
Bella città is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful city." The feminine singular phrase also translates as "beautiful town" in English. The pronunciation will be "BEL-la tcheet-TA" in Italian.
La nostra bella cittÃ? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "our beautiful town." The feminine singular definite article la ('the") may or may not appear in the Italian, depending upon the speaker's birthplace. The pronunciation will be "la NO-stra BEL-la tcheet-TA" in Italian.
Amo Città Agricola! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love Farm Town!" The declarative statement most famously references the Facebook video game considered the precursor to FarmVille. The pronunciation will be "A-mo tcheet-TA a-GREE-ko-la" in Italian.
"Place" is an English equivalent of the Italian word luogo.Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It also may be translated as "building, location, region, setting, town" under special circumstances. The pronunciation will be "LWO-go" in Italian.
"Wedge" is an English equivalent of the name Cevain Italy.Specifically, the word functions as a proper noun. It is what those who spea"k the form of Piedmontese in the northwest Italian province of Alessandria call the province and town of Cuneo. The pronunciation will be "TCHE-va" in Italian and Piedmontese.
campi"piazza della città (luogo centrale della città)"This means "Square of the city (central location of the city)"
Piazza di Firenze is an Italian equivalent of "Florence Square." The feminine singular noun, preposition, and proper noun translate literally into English as "square ("market place, "town clearing") of Florence." The pronunciation will be "PYAT-tsa dee fee-REN-tsey" in Italian.
The self-appellation of the town known in English as Naples is "Napoli" in Italian.