Credi ch'io sia brutto? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Do you think I'm ugly?"
Specifically, the present indicative verb credi is "(informal singular you) are believing/thinking, believe/think, do believe/think". The relative pronoun che* means "that". The personal pronoun io means "I". The present conjunctive sia means "(I) am". The masculine adjective brutto translates as "ugly".
The pronunciation will be "KRE-dee KEE-o SEE-a BROOT-to" in Italian.
*The vowel drops - and is replaced by an apostrophe - before a word whose spelling begins with a vowel.
'I think' is an English equivalent of 'Io penso'. The phrase also may be translated as 'I'm thinking' or 'I do think'. But no matter what the English translation, the Italian pronunciation is 'EE-oh PEHN-soh'.
Che ne pensi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What do you think about that?"Specifically, the interrogative pronoun che means "what." The partitive ne means "about it, about that, about this." The verb pensi means "(informal singular you) are thinking, do think, think."The pronunciation is "keh neh PEHN-see."
Credo di innamorarmi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I think I'm in love!"Specifically, the verb credo is "(I) am believing/thinking, do believe/think". The dependent preposition di literally means "of" but is required here to connect the two verbs. The present infinitive innamorare* means "to fall in love". The reflexive pronoun mi translates as "myself".The pronunciation will be "KREY-doh dee-NAH-moh-RAHR-mee" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a pronoun is added to the end of the present infinitive.
'À la' is a French phrase. It is commonly used in French cuisine to refer to a preparation or cooking style, such as "à la mode" which means 'in the style of'.
Che ne pensi d'imparare italiano? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "How about learning Italian?"Specifically, the interrogative che is "what?" The partitive ne means "about/of/on it" in this context. The verb pensi means "(informal singular you) are thinking, do think, think". The dependent preposition di* literally means "of". The present infinitive imparare means "to learn". The masculine noun italiano translates as "Italian (language)" in this context.The pronunciation will be "key** ney PEHN-see DEEM-pah-RAH-rey EE-tah-LYAH-noh" in Italian.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel.**The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "hey!"
cosa ne pensi di me is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
This phrase doesn't trasnslate smoothly into German. The closest translation I can think of is: Du würdest todtraurig sein wenn ich es täte
The phrase 'what do you have to think about' in Indonesian is apa yang harus kamu pikirkan tentang. Example sentence, 'What do you have to think about the global warming?': 'Apa yang harus kamu pikirkan tentang global warming?' In the word by word translation: * What: Apa * Do: Yang * You: Kamu* Have to: Harus * Think: Pikirkan * About: Tentang
French: penser Spanish: pensar German: denken Italian: pensare
Yes, Italians do think in Italian.
This phrase means "I think/am thinking of you too."
"I used to think" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Io pensavo. The first person singular subject pronoun and present indicative also translate into English as "I did think", "I thought," and "I was thinking," with the implication that those thoughts may be different nowadays. The pronunciation will be "EE-o pen-SA-vo" in Italian.