"DOH-vey sohn kwey FYEH-ree AWK-kee" is the pronunciation of the Italian question Dove son quei fieri occhi?
Specifically, the interrogative dove means "where." The verb son means "(they) are" in this context. The masculine plural demonstrative adjective quei means "those." The masculine plural adjective fieri means "proud." The masculine noun occhi means "eyes."
Pinocchi is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "pine eyes."Specifically, the masculine noun pino means "pine." The masculine noun occhi means "eyes." The pronunciation is "pee-NOHK-kee."
Occhi luminosi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Bright eyes!" The masculine plural phrase also translates literally as "Luminous eyes!" in English. The pronunciation will be "OK-kee LOO-mee-NO-see" in Pisan Italian.
occhi azzurri is the Italian phrase for blue eyes
(Avere gli) occhi neri is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "black-eyed." The masculine plural phrase translates literally into English as "(to have the) eyes black." The pronunciation will be "(a-VEY-rey lyee) OK-kee NEY-ree" in Italian.
Occhi marroni scuri is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "deep brown eyes." The masculine plural phrase also translates as "dark chestnut-brown eyes" in English. The pronunciation will be "OK-kee mar-RO-nee SKOO-ree" in Italian.
"Gorgeous, look!" is just one English equivalent of the Italian phrase Bella, occhi! The feminine adjective/noun and masculine plural noun translate into English literally as "(Hey) beautiful, eyes (on..)!" and loosely as "(Hey) gorgeous, look (pay attention, watch)!" The pronunciation will be "BEL-la OK-kee" in Italian.
Ho gli occhi castani is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I have brown eyes." The declarative statement also translates into English as "I do have brown eyes" according to context. The pronunciation will be "o lyee OK-kee ka-STA-nee" in Italian.
Che begli occhi verdi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What beautiful green eyes!" The masculine plural exclamatory phrase models a characteristic of Italian whereby one of two adjectives may go before, and the other, after their nouns. The pronunciation will be "key BEY-lyee OK-kee VER-dee" in Italian.
Begli occhi! and Che begli occhi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What beautiful eyes!" The speaker's birthplace and personal preferences motivate the choice. The respective pronunciations will be "BEY-lyee OK-kee" and "key BEY-lyee OK-kee" in Italian.
Hai gli occhi belli is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You have beautiful eyes." The subject pronoun tu (informal singular "you") need not precede the present indicative, masculine plural definite article, noun, and adjective since context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "eye lyee OK-kee BEL-lee" in Italian.
"In my eyes, you all were mine!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Nei miei occhi eravate miei! The masculine plural prepositional phrase, second person informal plural imperfect indicative, and masculine plural possessive model a difference between English and Italian whereby the first-mentioned language often does not employ "the" whereas the second-mentioned language uses them, such as here with nei ("in the"). The pronunciation will be "ney MIEH-ee OK-kee ey-RA-va-tey MEE-o" in Italian.
"You have two eyes, beautiful like the sea" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Hai due occhi belli come il mare.Specifically, the verb hai is "(informal singular you) have". The number due means "two (2)". The masculine noun occhi means "eyes". The masculine adjective bellimeans "beautiful". The adverb come means "as, like". The masculine singular definite article il means "the". The masculine noun mare translates as "sea".The pronunciation will be "eye DOO-ey OHK-kee BEHL-lee KOH-mey eel MAH-rey" in Italian.