The Italian word cinema is masculine, not feminine, in gender.
The Italian word papa, for "pope," is masculine.
l'uva is feminine.
Un italiano in the masculine and una italiana in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "an Italian."Specifically, the masculine definite article un and the feminine una mean "a, one." The masculine noun italiano and the feminine italiana mean "Italian." The pronunciation is "oo-NEE-tah-LYAH-noh" in the masculine and "oo-NEE-tah-LYAH-nah" in the feminine.
The masculine singular noun antipasto is an Italian equivalent of the English word "appetizer." The pronunciation will be "AN-tee-PA-sto" in Italian.
Carlina in the feminine and Carlino in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English name "Charlie".Specifically, the name is a proper noun. It may serve as a feminine or masculine nickname in Italian. The pronunciation will be "kar-LEE-na" in the feminine and "kar-LEE-no" in the masculine in Italian.
The adjective, Italian, can be either masculine or feminine/ EX: La maison Italienne is feminine but Le village Italien is masculine. If you mean the country of Italy, it is spelled L'Italie and is feminine.
Rinata in the feminine and rinato in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "reborn." The pronunciation will be "ree-NA-ta" in the feminine and "ree-NA-to" in the masculine.
"A lemon" = "Un limone" so it is masculine.
cugino is masculine, cugina is feminine.
The Italian word torta is feminine, not masculine, in gender. The singular noun in question translates typically as "cake," "pie" or "tart." The pronunciation will be "TOR-ta" in Pisan Italian.
Odioso in the masculine and odiosa in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English word "hater."Specifically, the Italian words are the feminine and masculine forms of an adjective. The meaning tends to be translated as "hateful." The pronunciation is "oh-DYOH-soh" in the masculine and "oh-DYOH-sah" in the feminine.