"charm" is "fascino"
(but charming is affascinante)
both the words are used for males and females
The main difference between an Irish charm bracelet and Italian charm bracelet would be the charms. The charms would represent either Irish or Italian heritage.
The Italian horn charm is also called cornicello. http://www.charmfactory.com/italian-horn-charm.htm
An Italian charm bracelet can be bought in various different flea markets in Italy as well as on websites that sell Italian charm bracelets among other accessories which come from Italy.
You can get a good quality Italian charm bracelet on the ItalianCharms website. On this particular website, there is a tool that you can use to build your ideal bracelet.
Charm or Enchantment may be an English equivalent of 'incanto'. The word in Italian is a masculine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'il' ['the'] and as its indefinite article 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'een-KAHN-toh'.
One can find and purchase Italian charm bracelet charms on websites such as eBay, Amazon and Nomination Jewellery. They are also available on Hebe Jewellery and Italian Charms.
Amuleto for good luck and fascino for fascination are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "charm." The masculine singular nouns in question serve respectively to identify a good luck bearer or talisman in the first instance and an attraction or fascination about someone's appearance or personality. The respective pronunciations will be "A-moo-LEY-to" and "fa-SHEE-no" in Italian.
"Boyfriend" as a noun and "enamored" as an adjective/past participle are English equivalents of the Italian word innamorato.Specifically, the Italian word can be an adjective/past participle formed from the present infinitive innamorare("to charm, to enamor". Or it may be a masculine noun which means "boyfriend, lover, sweetheart". Either way, the pronunciation always will be "een-NAH-moh-RAH-toh" in Italian.
to charm = hiksim (הקסים) charm (noun) = sharm (שארם)
The Italian charm bracelet is made by connecting several individual links together on a stretchy band to form a bracelet. Eighteen different chain links with faces or designs on them are linked together to form the bracelet. The Wikipedia website has all the information needed about Italian charm bracelets.
The participles of the verb "to charm" - charmed and charming - can be used as adjectives. The noun charm is used as a noun adjunct in such forms as charm bracelet and charm school.
One can purchase cheap Italian charm bracelets at any of your local jewelry stores such as Claire's or one may also find them online sites such as eBay.