It is Daijobu desu.
Stiamo bene is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "We are fine." The pronunciation will be "STYAM-mo BEH-ney" in Italian.
"Fine and solid" about an object and "thin and firm" about a female are literal English equivalents of the French phrase fine et ferme. The pronunciation of the feminine singular adjectival phrase will be " fee-ney fehrm" in French.
If the 'fine thank you' you mean is when you reply to a question asking about how you are, then the translation is 'Baik-baik saja, terimakasih'.
The phrase 'kabar baik' when translated to English is similar to I am fine. When translated word by word, kabar is news and baik is good. So it is actually good news.You can say 'kabar baik' when someone asks you 'apa kabarnya?' (how are you?)
lovely=kirei* pearl=shinju *there is actually no direct translation of lovely from English to Japanese. But in a loose translation, kirei will do fine.
Vivere la vita fina! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Living the fine life!" The feminine singular phrase translates literally as "To live the fine life!" in English. The pronunciation will be "VEE-vey-rey la VEE-ta FEE-na" in Pisan Italian.
The word pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis can be defined as a inflammation of the lungs due to inhaling fine silica dust. According to the Google translator, the word in Japanese is ???.
"You are fine!" in English means Tu stai bene! in Italian.
"O.K.!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase D'accord! The interjection translates additionally as "All right!" or "Fine!" and literally as "of agreement" in English. The pronunciation will be "da-kor" in French.
Sto bene is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I am fine."Specifically, the present indicative verb sto means "(I) am" in this context. The adverb bene translates as "fine, good, well." The pronunciation will be "sto BEH-ney" in Italian.
I think those US PSP games are actually Japanese games translated to American English. And all PSPs are japanese, so it should work just fine.
"End" in English is fine in Italian.