Chiaro (male) Chiara( female)
"It" or "us" as a pronoun and "here" or "there" as an adverb are English equivalents of the Italian word ci. Context makes clear which meaning prevails. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "tchee" in Italian.
"I price" as a verb and "price" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word prezzo. Context makes clear which form suits. The pronunciation will be "PRET-tso" in Italian.
"Holy" as an adjective and "saints" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word santi. Context makes clear which form suits. The pronunciation will be "SAN-tee" in Italian.
"Mine" as a pronoun and "my" as an adjective are English equivalent of the Italian word mia. Context makes the choice clear. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "MEE-a" in Italian.
"Perch" as a noun and "Persian" as an adjective are English equivalents of the Italian word persico. Context makes clear which meaning prevails for the masculine singular word. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "PER-see-ko" in Italian.
Ectasi for contemplation or rapture and ecstasyfor the hallucinogenic are Italian equivalents of the English word "ecstasy." Context makes clear which option suits. The pronunciation will be "EHK-sta-zee" in Italian.
"They marry" and "You all give in marriage" are English equivalents of the Italian word Maritano. Context makes clear which form suits. The pronunciation will be "ma-REE-ta-no" in Pisan Italian.
"Hey!" in Spanish to English translation and "that," "what," "which" or "who" in Italian to English translations are equivalents of the Italian and Spanish word che. Context makes clear which option suits in Italian, where the word serves as a conjunction (case 2) or an interrogative (examples 3, 4, 5). The respective pronunciations will be "key" in Italian and "tchey" in Spanish.
"I travel" and "voyage" are English equivalent of the Italian word viaggio. Context makes clear whether the same-spelled word serves as the first person singular present indicative (case 1) or a masculine singular noun (example 2). The pronunciation will be "VYAD-djo" in Italian.
The Italian word for no is no.
"Camp" or "field" as a noun and "I get by" as a verb are English equivalents of the Italian word campo. Context makes clear which meaning prevails. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "KAM-po" in Italian.
"Hate" as a noun and "I hate" as a verb are English equivalents of the Italian word odio. Context makes clear which meaning prevails. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "O-dyo" in Italian.