Il tuo cane in the masculine and la tua cagna in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "your dog."
Specifically, the masculine definite article il and the feminine la mean "the." The masculine possessive adjective tuo and the feminine tua mean "your." The masculine noun cane means "(male) dog." The feminine noun cagnameans "(female) dog."
The respective pronunciations are "eel TOO-oh KAH-neh" and "lah TOO-ah KAH-nyah."
Bel cane is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "beautiful dog." The masculine singular adjective and noun also may be translated into English as "handsome (male) dog." The pronunciation will be "bel KA-ney" in Italian.
Acqua di cane is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "dog water".Specifically, the feminine noun acqua is "water". The preposition di means "of". The masculine noun canetranslates as "dog".The pronunciation will be "AH-kwah dee KAH-ney" in Italian.
Cagna bellina is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "pretty dog." The feminine singular noun and adjective translate also as "pretty female dog" in English. The pronunciation will be "KA-nya bel-LEE-na" in Italian.
"With dog" in English is con cane in Italian.
Per nonno is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to grandad." The prepositional phrase also translates as "for grandfather" in English. The pronunciation will be "per NON-no" in Italian.
Dopo di ciò is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "after that." The prepositional phrase literally translates into English as "after of that." The pronunciation will be "DO-po dee tcho" in Italian.
In Cristo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in Christ." The masculine singular prepositional phrase models a rare instance in which English and Italian phrase or sentence structures match. The pronunciation will be "een KREE-sto" in Italian.
"Your dog" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il tuo cane.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article ilmeans "the." The masculine possessive adjective tuo means "your." The masculine noun cane means "dog."The pronunciation is "eel TOO-oh KAH-neh."
Hot dog, salsiccia tedesca, and würstel are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "hot dog." The choice depends upon whether the speaker wishes to use English (case 1) or German (example 2) loan words or Italian equivalents (instance 3, translated into English as "German sausage"). The respective pronunciations will be "ot dog," sal-SEET-tcha tey-DEY-ska," and vyoor-stel" in Italian.
"Black dog" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "cane nero."Specifically, the masculine noun "cane" means "dog." Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one"). The masculine adjective "nero" means "black."The pronunciation is "KAH-neh NEH-roh."
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.
Per sempre is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "for keeps." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "for always" in English. The pronunciation will be "per SEM-prey" in Italian.