Piccola scimmia is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "little monkey." The pronunciation of the feminine singular adjective and noun will be "PEEK-ko-la SHEEM-mya" in Italian.
Piccolo topo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "little rat."
Specifically, the masculine adjective piccolo means "little, small." The masculine noun topo means "rat." The pronunciation is "PEEK-koh-loh TOH-poh."
Morsini di tassini is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "little rat bites." The masculine plural prepositional phrase may be rendered literally into English as "little bite (wounds) of little rats." The pronunciation will be "mor-SEE-nee dee tas-SEE-nee" in Italian.
"Little rat" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase piccolo topo.Specifically, the masculine adjective piccolo means "little, small." The masculine noun topo means "rat." The pronunciation is "PEEK-koh-loh TOH-poh."
"Rat" in English is ratto in Italian.
Razza mista is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "mixed race".Specifically, the feminine noun razza means "race". The feminine adjective mista translates as "mixed". The pronunciation will be "RAT-tsa MEE-sta" in Italian.
Abbracci e preghiere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "hugs and prayers."Specifically, the masculine noun abbracci is "embraces, hugs." The conjunction e means "and." The feminine noun preghiere translates as "prayers."The pronunciation will be "ab-RAT-tchee ey prey-GYEH-rey" in Italian.
Popolo di razza mista is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "mixed race people".Specifically, the masculine noun popolo is "people". The preposition di means "of". The feminine noun razza means "race". The feminine adjective mistatranslates as "mixed".The pronunciation will be "PO-po-lo dee RAT-tsa MEE-sta" in Italian.
"Dear sweet little object/person" is one English interpretation of the Italian name Caracciolo. The masculine proper noun may represent the combination of the ancient masculine name Carus -- which derives from the same-spelled adjective for "beloved," "dear," "expensive" -- and the diminutive suffix -cciolo for "little." The pronunciation will be "KA-rat-TCHO-lo" in Italian.
The English translation is "There is a girl" (nina usually means "little girl")
Cavia porcellus does mean little rat in Latin.
There is no such language as Australian. Most people in Australia speak English, so they would say rat.
The plural form of rat is 'rats'.
"Fat fat the water rat, fifty bullets in your hat."