"Wine" is an English equivalent of "vino."
The Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "VEE-noh."
"Sweetness" is an English equivalent of the Italian word dolcezza.
Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine singular indefinite article una ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "dohl-TCHEHT-tsah" in Italian.
"Sweet new style" is an English equivalent of the Italian literary phrase dolce stil novo.
Specifically, the feminine/masculine adjective dolce is "sweet". The masculine noun stil means "style". The masculine adjective novo translates as "new".
The pronunciation will be "DOL-tchey steel NO-vo" in Italian.
"The sweet wine" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il dolce vino.
Specifically, the masculine definite article il means "the." The feminine/masculine adjective dolce means "sweet." The masculine noun vino means "wine."
The pronunciation is "eel DOHL-tcheh VEE-noh."
"Life is sweet" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase La vita è dolce.
Specifically, the feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine noun vita means "life." The verb è means "(He/she/it) is, (formal singular you) are." The feminine/masculine adjective dolce means "sweet."
The pronunciation is "lah VEE-tah eh DOHL-tcheh."
"The good wine" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il buon vino.
Specifically, the masculine definite article il means "the." The masculine adjective buon means "good." The masculine noun vino means "wine."
The pronunciation is "eel bwohn VEE-noh."
"Sweet life" in English means la dolce vita ("the sweet life") in Italian.
Dolce Vita - 2004 Italian Superstition was released on: USA: 2005
"I love you, sweet life!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ti amo, la dolce vita! The second person informal singular pronoun, first person singular present indicative, and feminine singular definite article, feminine/masculine singular adjective, and feminine singular noun model a difference between the two languages, with Italian employing la -- in this case -- where English uses no "the." The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo la DOL-tchey VEE-ta" in Italian.
"The sweet life" is a literal English translation of the Italian phrase La dolce vita.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article lameans "the" in English. The feminine/masculine adjective dolce means "sweet" in English. The feminine noun vita means "life" in English.The pronunciation will be "lah DOHL-tchey VEE-tah" in Italian.'Sweet life' is an Italian equivalent of 'dolce vita'. The word 'vita' is a feminine noun whose definite article is 'la' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'una' ['a, one']. The phrase is pronounced 'DOHL-tcheh VEE-tah'.
"What (a) sweet life!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Che vita dolce! The exclamation also translates literally as "That sweet life..." as a phrase or sentence fragment. The pronunciation will be "key VEE-ta DOL-tchey" in Pisan Italian.
"Sweet life" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase dolce vita.Specifically, the feminine/masculine adjective dolceincludes among its many meanings "gentle, nice, pleasant, soft, sweet". The feminine noun vita means "life". The pronunciation will be "DOHL-tchey VEE-tah" in Italian.
La Dolce Vita!
Vita dulcis (modern Italian la dolce vita).
It is pronounce similar to DOLCE & GABBANA. Even though DOLCE VITA is an american brand, but the name is italian. So the frist word "DOLCE" is pronounced as "DOLCHE" and VITA will be pronounced the normal "VITA". FYI- They also have recently launched their Men's line "JD FISK" in 2011.
Dolce Vita - 2004 Dolce Vita was released on: USA: 2006
"That sweet life with...!" and "What (a) sweet life with...!" are English equivalents of the incomplete Italian phrase Che vita dolce con...! Context makes clear whether a phrase or sentence fragment (case 1) or an uncompleted exclamation (example 2) suits. The pronunciation will be "key VEE-ta DOL-tchey kon" in Pisan Italian.
"joie de vivre" translates to "gioia di vivere" in Italian. It refers to a cheerful enjoyment of life, an exuberant enthusiasm for living.