Cose sulla lingua italiana is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "things about the Italian language." The pronunciation will be "KO-sey SUL-la LEEN-gwa EE-ta-LYA-na" in Italian.
"Pisan" in an English equivalent of the Italian word Pisano.Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. It refers to an inhabitant of the north Italian city of Pisa, the language of the people of Pisa, or to things relating to the city. Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation always will be "pee-SAH-noh".
"Beautiful things!" in English is Cose belle! in Italian. The feminine plural phrase models a tendency of Italian to place adjectives after, not before, their nouns. The pronunciation will be "KO-sey BEL-ley" in Italian.
Le cose stanno andando bene
Cose and robe are Italian equivalents of the English word "things." Context makes clear whether "things" literally (case 1) or "stuff" colloquially (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciation will be "KO-sey" and "RO-bey" in Pisan Italian.
Cose buone is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "good things." The feminine plural noun and adjective model a grammatical difference whereby Italian tends to put adjectives after, not before, nouns. The pronunciation will be "KO-sey BWO-ney" in Italian.
"The beautiful things" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase le cose belle. The feminine singular definite article, noun, and adjective translate into English by word order as "the things beautiful." The pronunciation will be "ley BEL-ley KO-sey" in Italian.
"Homemade (things)" is an English equivalent of the Italian word caserecci. The masculine plural adjective also may be rendered into English as "home-baked" or "local" depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "KA-sey-TET-tchee" in Italian.
Cose romantiche is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "romantic things." The feminine plural phrase models a difference between the two languages whereby Italian tends to place adjectives after, not before, their nouns. The pronunciation will be "KO-sey ro-MAN-tee-key" in Italian.
"Italian mambo" is the English equivalent of the Italian phrase mambo italiano. The masculine singular noun and adjective refer literally to a Cuban dance with an Italian spin or loosely to an unexpected mix of things and turn of events. The pronunciation will be "MAM-bo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Ultra is the same in English and Italian. The adverb, adjective, and prefix reach the "ultimate" regarding persons and things, such as in terms of the ultra soccer fans who exhibit behavioral gamuts regarding their teams. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "OOL-tra" in Italian.
Buona roba and buone cose are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "good stuff." Context makes clear whether the reference is informal and inclusive of drugs (case 1) or translated literally as "good things" (example 2). The respective pronunciations will be "BWO-na RO-ba" and "BWO-ney KO-sey" in Italian.
that's hard aah... well her are my things.. Italian ,Spanish, or French maybe German? or am i just in to it ;))