Tutti voi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "all of you."
Specifically, the indefinite adjective/noun/pronoun tutti means "all, everybody, everyone" in the sense of a group of either all males or mixed females and males. The subject pronoun voi translates as "(informal plural) you, you all." The pronunciation will be "TOOT-tee voy"* in Italian.
*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "toy."
"All that" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase tutto ciò.Specifically, the masculine indefinite tutto means "all". The demonstrative pronoun ciò translates as "that". The pronunciation will be "TOOT-to TCHO" in Italian.
The Italian translation fo all is tutti
Benvenuto a tutti! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Welcome to all!"Specifically, the greeting benvenuto literally means "well arrived, well come". The preposition a means "to". The masculine noun tutti translates as "all, everybody, everyone".The pronunciation will be "BEN-vey-NOO-to a TOOT-tee" in Italian.
"All (is) well!" as a statement and "Everything o.k.?" as a question are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Tutto bene.Specifically the adverb tutto means "all, everything" in this context. The adverb bene translates as "fine, good, O.K., well". Whatever the context, the pronunciation will be "TOOT-to BEH-ney" in Italian.
"All the stations" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Tutte le stazioni.Specifically, the feminine adjective tutte is "all". The feminine plural definite article le means "the". The feminine noun stazioni translates as "stations".The pronunciation will be "TOOT-tey ley stah-TSYOH-nee" in Italian.
"All fruits" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase tutti frutti.Specifically, the masculine adjective tutti means "all, every." The masculine noun frutti means "fruits." The pronunciation is "TOOT-tee FROOT-tee."
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.
Ve is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to you all."Specifically, the Italian word is a personal pronoun. It is the informal second person in the plural. It is the special form that vi takes before another pronoun or for emphasis.The pronunciation is "veh."
Festival di ogni tipo is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "all kinds of festivals."Specifically, the masculine noun festival functions as an English loan word in Italian. The preposition di means "of." The indefinite feminine/masculine adjective ognimeans "all" in this context. The masculine noun tipotranslates as "kind, type."The pronunciation will be "FEY-stee-val dee O-nyee TEE-po" in Italian.
Tutto buona! in the feminine and Tutto buono! in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "All good!"Specifically, the adverb tutto means "all, completely, entirely" in this context. The feminine adjective buona and the masculine buono translate as "good." The pronunciation will be "TOOT-to BWO-na" in the feminine and "TOOT-to BWO-no" in the masculine.
"You're very kind" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Siete molto gentili.Specifically, the verb siete is "(you, you all) are". The adverb molto means "very". The feminine/masculine adjective gentili translates as "kind".The pronunciation will be "SYEY-tey MOHl-toh djehn-TEE-lee" in Italian.
Vi amo tutti! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Love you all!" The pronunciation of the present indicative phrase in the first person singular will be "vee A-mo TOOT-tee" in Italian.