"LO-rey-FEE-tchey" is the pronunciation of the Italian phrase L'orefice.
Specifically, the singular definite article l'* means "the". It may be either the masculine il or the feminine la, both of whose vowels drop and are replaced by apostrophes before words which begin with vowels. The feminine/masculine noun orefice translates as "goldsmith".
Italian is the language in the phrase al fresco.Specifically, the word al means "at/into the". The masculine noun fresco translates as "fresh air". The pronunciation will be "ahl FREY-skoh" in Italian.
The pronunciation of the Italian phrase 'Lei รจ la mia vita' is "lay eh lah mee-ah vee-tah."
Parlare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to speak."Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. It is the infinitive in the present tense. The pronunciation is "pahr-LAH-reh."
Italian is the language in the phrase Buon Natale.Specifically, the masculine adjective buon means "good" literally and "happy, merry" in this context. The masculine noun natale translates as "nativity" literally and "Christmas" in this context. The pronunciation will be "BWO-na-TA-ley" in Italian.
No, Sogno grande is not the Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Dream big." The masculine singular noun and adjective instead translate into English as "big dream," with the pronunciation "SO-nyo GRAN-dey" in Italian. The correct phrase will be Sogna in grande ("SO-nya een GRAN-dey") in the singular and Sognate in grande in the plural in Italian.
Fernando Lorefice was born on 1983-05-12.
Dopo di ciò is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "after that." The prepositional phrase literally translates into English as "after of that." The pronunciation will be "DO-po dee tcho" in Italian.
Casa per me is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "home for me." The pronunciation of the prepositional phrase will be "KA-sa per mey" in Italian.
"The lover" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase l'amante. The pronunciation will be "la-MEN-tey" in Italian.
L'ama is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love her." The pronunciation will be "LA-ma" in Italian.
"The Hawaiian thrush" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase l'omao. The Italian phrase relies upon the Hawaiian loan word. The pronunciation will be "lo-MOW" in Pisan Italian.
La nostra casa is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "our house." The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "la NO-stra KA-sa" in Italian.
Amare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to love." The verb in question serves as a present infinitive in a phrase or sentence. The pronunciation will be "a-MA-rey" in Italian.
Vivere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "To live".Specifically, the word is a verb. It is the present infinitive. The pronunciation will be "VEE-vey-rey" in Italian.
Sei in..., which refers to the Italian informal singular "you," is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You are in... ." The pronunciation will be "seh-een" in Italian.
Mi fa... is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "Makes me... ." The declarative phrase also translates as "He (she) makes me...," "It does me..." or "(formal singular) You make me..." in English. The pronunciation will be "mee fah" in Italian.
In Cristo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in Christ." The masculine singular prepositional phrase models a rare instance in which English and Italian phrase or sentence structures match. The pronunciation will be "een KREE-sto" in Italian.