"Il giovane" in the masculine and "la giovane" in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "the young one."
Specifically, the masculine definite article "il" and the feminine "la" mean "the." The feminine/masculine noun "giovane" means "youth, young one." The respective pronunciations are "eel DJYOH-van-neh" and "lah DJYOH-vah-neh."
Una signorina is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a young lady." The feminine singular phrase also translates literally as "one young lady" in English. The pronunciation will be "OO-na SEE-nyo-REE-na" in Pisan Italian.
Un rimorso is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "one regret." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "a regret" in English. The pronunciation will be "oon ree-MOR-so" in Italian.
In gennaio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in January." The prepositional phrase models a rare instance where English and Italian phrase or sentence structure resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "een djen-NEYE-o" in Pisan Italian.
Un cuore is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "one heart." The masculine singular phrase also translates literally as "a heart" in English. The pronunciation will be "oon KWO-rey" in Pisan Italian.
Una vacanza is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "one vacation." The feminine singular phrase also translates as "a vacation" in English. The pronunciation will be "OO-na va-KAN-tsa" in Italian.
Sei in..., which refers to the Italian informal singular "you," is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You are in... ." The pronunciation will be "seh-een" in Italian.
Un saluto is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a greeting." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "one greeting" in English. The pronunciation will be "oon sa-LOO-to" 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.
Killer numero uno is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "number one killer." The above-mentioned phrase models Italian language use of an English loan word, followed, not preceded by, the descriptive phrase. The pronunciation will be "KEEL-ler NOO-mey-roo OO-no" in Italian.
Un bacio! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "A kiss!" The masculine singular phrase also translates literally as "One kiss!" in English. The pronunciation will be "oon BA-tcho" in Pisan Italian.
Amore e lealtà is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "love and loyalty." The declarative phrase models a rare instance in which English and Italian phrase and sentence structure resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "a-MO-rey LEY-al-TA" in Italian.
Tutti i colori is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "all the colors." The masculine plural phrase models a rare instance in which English and Italian phrase or sentence structure resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "TOOT-tee ko-LO-ree" in Italian.