Moltissime grazie! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you very, very much!" The courtesy translates literally as "Very, very many thank yous!" in English. The pronunciation will be "mol-TEES-see-mey GRA-tsyey" in Italian.
GRAH-tsee-eh is an Italian pronunciation of 'Thank you'. The word in Italian is an interjection. It's common, and much easier to say than one of the conjugated verb forms of the infinitive 'ringraziare' ['to thank, give thanks'].
"Thank you so much!" in English means Grazie mille! in Italian.
"Thank you very much for your generous gift" in English means Grazie mille per il tuo (one person) /vostro (plural) generoso regalo in Italian.
'Grazie tantissimo, Professori' is an Italian equivalent of 'Thank you so much, Teachers'. There are actually a couple of options for 'teachers' in Italian. An elementary school teacher is 'maestro', and a high school teacher 'insegnante', in Italian.
"Thanks so much!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Grazie tanto! The courtesy and adverb also translate into English as "Thank you so much!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey TAN-to" in Italian.
Grazie mille! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thanks a lot!" The courtesy in question translates literally into English as "1,000 thanks!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MEEL-ley" in Italian.
Grazie mille! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thanks very much!" The courtesy translates literally as "Thank you a thousand (times)!" in English. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MEEL-ley" in Italian.
Compratore eccellente. Grazie mille is an Italian equivalent of 'Excellent buyer. Thank you very much'. The phrase in Italian is pronounced 'kohm-prah-TOH-ray ehch-chehl-LEHN-tay. GRAH-tsee-ay MEEL-lay'.The masculine gender noun 'compratore' means 'buyer'. The adjective 'eccellente' means 'excellent'. The interjection 'grazie' means 'thanks, thank you'. The number 'mille' means 'thousand'.
Pizza is the most popular Italian food in the US. The pizza we buy, although delicious, is not at all like its Italian cousin. Both have crust, cheese, and tomato on them, but in Italy these ingredients are not broken down as much. You will see slices of tomato and cheese instead of cooked tomatoes or shredded cheese. The taste, too, is different; Italian pizza tastes much fresher.
Grazie mille! (Mi fa) piacere avere tue notizie! -- which literally means "(A) thousand thanks! (It gives me) pleasure to get your news" -- is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you so much! Nice to hear from you!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MEEL-ley (mee fa) pya-TCHEY-rey a-VEY-rey TOO-ey no-TEE-tsyey" in Italian.
Grazie mille, uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you so much, man!" The courtesy in question translates literally into English as "1,000 thanks, man!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MEEL-ley WO-mo" in Italian.