'Il principio' is one Italian equivalent of 'The beginning'. It's pronounced 'eel preen-TCHEE-pyoh'. Another equivalent is 'l'inizio', which is pronounced 'lee-NEE-tsyoh'.
Anti- is the same in English and Italian.Specifically, the word functions as an adjectival suffix. It is synonymous with contro- ("against") in Italian. The pronunciation will be "AN-tee" in Italian.
zoppetto: medieval Italian limping hop dance
You use all' when the following word begins with a vowel, as in all'inizio ("in the beginning").
"A" before a word beginning with a consonant, "an" before a word starting with a vowel, and "one (1)" as a number are English equivalents of the Italian and Spanish word una. The pronunciation of the feminine singular indefinite article or number will be "OO-na" in Italian and Spanish.
It is a common abbreviation for 'Italian'. It's based on the first two letters of the word. The two letters are the beginning letters for the word in a number of languages. So the abbreviation works under a number of situations, in a number of different languages.
Antipasto is the Italian equivalent of the food at the beginning of the meal. It's pronounced 'ahn-tee-PAH-stoh'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one'].
The Italian word for no is no.
Terra is an Italian equivalent of the English word "earth." The feminine singular noun references the planet or the soil when beginning respectively with a capitalized or small-letter "t." The pronunciation will be "TER-ra" in Italian.
"Beautiful" is an English equivalent of the Italian word bella. The feminine singular word serves as an adjective, noun or pronoun when beginning with a small letter and as a popular diminutive for Isabella ("Isabel," "Isabelle") when starting with a capital letter. The pronunciation will be "BEL-la" in Pisan Italian.
Aria as in Opera use, Canto or something like that for ( song) note similarity of Canto to (Chant) again the letter H is used sparingly in Italian and never at the beginning of a word- hence Enrico- for Henry Alto for Halt, etc.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
'Tcheh' is the sound that the letters 'ce' make in Italian. It doesn't matter what word they're part of. It doesn't matter where they're found within the word: beginning, middle or end. The sound always is the same.