"L'uomo" is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "The man."
Specifically, the singular definite article "l"* means "the." The masculine noun "uomo" means "man." The pronunciation is "LWOH-moh."
*The masculine singular definite article actually is "il." But the vowel "i" drops before a noun that begins with a vowel. The temporary nature of that drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the remaining letter "l" and immediately before the first letter of the succeeding noun.
Un uomo italiano is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "an Italian man." The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase will be "oo-NWO-mo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Un uomo -- which sometimes is written un'uomo -- is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "one man." The masculine singular phrase also translates into English as "a man." The pronunciation will be "oo-NWO-mo" in Italian.
Uomo sensuale e... is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "sexy man and... ." The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "sensual man and..." or "sensuous man and..." in English. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo sen-SWA-ley" in Italian.
Uomo o ragazzo? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Man or boy?" The masculine singular phrase also translates as "Man or boyfriend?" in English. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo ra-GAT-tso" in Pisan Italian.
Da uomo a uomo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "man-to-man".Specifically, the preposition da is "from". The masculine noun uomo means "man". The preposition a translates as "at, to".The pronunciation will be "da WO-mo a WO-mo" in Italian.
Manzo tritato is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "minced beef." The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase will be "MAN-tso tree-TA-to" in Italian.
Buon uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Good man!" The phrase models a rare instance where the phrase or sentence structure of both languages resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "bwo-NWO-mo" in Pisan Italian.
Buon uomo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "good man."Specifically, the masculine adjective buon means "good." The masculine noun uomo translates as "man." The pronunciation will be "bwo-NWO-mo" in Italian.
Uomo italiano is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italian man." Just the word italiano may be used as long as contexts communicates that the "Italian" is a man, not something Italian, such as the language. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Pisan Italian.
Ciao, uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hello, man!" The greeting also translates into English as "Bye, man!" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tchow WO-mo" in Italian.
Bellissimo uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hot man!" The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "Gorgeous man!" or "Handsomest man!" and will be heard alongside slangy, trendy phrases that come and go, often with double meanings. The pronunciation will be "bel-LEES-see-mo WO-mo" in Pisan Italian.
Uomo sensuale danzando is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "sexy man dancing." The masculine singular phrase literally translates as "sensual man dancing" or "sensuous man dancing" in English. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo sen-SWA-ley dan-TSAN-do" in Italian.