Ciao a tutti! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, everyone!"
Specifically, the greeting ciao is "goodbye" or "hello" according to context. The preposition a means "to". The masculine plural indefinite adjective/noun/pronoun tuttitranslates as "everybody, everyone".
The pronunciation will be "TCHOW* ah TOOT-tee" in Italian.
*The sound is similar to that in the English adverb "how".
Mi dispiace che parta. Buona fortuna is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Sorry you're leaving. Good luck."
Specifically, the personal pronoun mi means "to me." The verb dispiace means "is displeasing." The relative pronoun che means "that." The verb parta means '(I/you) leave, (he/she/it) leaves" according to the context. The feminine adjective buona means "good." The feminine noun fortuna means "chance, fortune, good luck, luck."
The pronunciation is "mee dee-SPYAH-tcheh keh PAHR-tah BWOh-nah fohr-TOO-nah."
Ciao, amici! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, friends!"
Specifically, the greeting/interjection ciao may be used to begin or end an interaction. The masculine noun amici means "(male, mixed group of male and female) friends." The pronunciation is "tchow* ah-MEE-tchee."
*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "chow."
"Good day to everyone!" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Buon giorno a tutti!
Specifically, the masculine adjective buon* is "good". The masculine noun giorno means "day". The preposition a means "to". The masculine noun tutti translates as "all, everybody, everyone".
The pronunciation will be "bwohn DJOR-no a TOOT-tee" in Italian.
*The final vowel drops when the following word begins with a consonant.
the Italian translation of the English words peaceful friends is "amici pacifici". Have a nice day! Arrivederci!
Ciao, amante! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, lover!"Specifically, the interjection ciao means "hello, hey, hi" or "bye, goodbye" according to context. The feminine/masculine noun amante translates as "lover". The pronunciation will be "TCHOW a-MAN-tey" in Italian.
Chow Belle is actually misspelled. The correct spelling is "ciao Bella" which is the Italian translation of "goodbye beautiful".
Ciao, amica mia! in the feminine and Ciao, amico mio! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Goodbye, my friend!" The two above-mentioned greetings translate literally into English by word order as "Bye (goodbye, hello, hi), friend mine!" The respective pronunciations will be "TCHOW a-MEE-ka MEE-a" in the feminine and "TCHOW a-MEE-ko MEE-o" in the masculine in Italian.
"Goodbye to summer!" in English is Addio all'estate! in Italian.
"Female friends" in English is amiche in Italian.
"Goodbye, loser!" is one English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ciao, fallito!Specifically, the greeting ciao means "bye, goodbye, hello, hi" according to context. The masculine noun fallito translates as "failure, loser". The pronunciation will be "tchow fal-LEE-to" in Italian.
"Goodbye, my lover!" in English is Arrivederci, amante mio! in Italian.
'Adios amigos' is Spanish for 'Goodbye my friends' or 'goodbye friends.'
Ciao, mia bella donna! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, my beautiful woman!"Specifically, the greeting ciao is "goodbye" in this context. The feminine possessive adjective mia means "my". The feminine adjective bella means "beautiful". The feminine noun donna translates as "woman".The pronunciation will be "tchow MEE-ah BEHL-lah DOHN-nah" in Italian.
Ciao, amici! in the masculine and Ciao, amiche! in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Hello, friends!"Specifically, the greeting ciao means "bye, goodbye, hello, hi" depending upon context. The masculine noun amici and the feminine amiche respectively translate as "(all-male or mixed female and male) friends" and "(all-female) friends".The pronunciation will be "CHOW a-MEE-tchee" in the masculine and "CHOW a-MEE-ke" in the feminine.
Goodbye