"Little" in size is an English equivalent of the -iniending on Italian pasta names. The pronunciation of the masculine plural suffix will be "EE-nee" in Italian.
Giano is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Janus." The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- whose origins go back to the two-faced Roman god of beginnings and endings -- will be "DYA-no" in Italian.
Sarò qui! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I will be here!" The declaration may be preceded immediately by io ("I"), for emphasis, but not for clarity, which already is served by context and verb endings. The pronunciation will be "(EE-o) sa-RO kwee" in Pisan Italian.
"I have not..." in English is Non ho... in Italian. The phrase may be preceded immediately by the first person singular io ("I") -- even though subject pronouns are not required where context and verb endings make the speaker clear -- for emphasis. The pronunciation will be "(EE-o) no-no" in Italian.
Ti amo, bella! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love you, beautiful!" the declarative statement need not begin with the pronoun io ("I") since context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo BEL-la" in Italian.
Accetto! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I accept!" The verb may be preceded immediately by io("I"), for emphasis, even though context and verb endings make the first person singular subject clear. The pronunciation will be "(EE-o) at-TCHET-to" in Pisan Italian.
È mercoledi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "It's Wednesday!" Italian mandates subject pronouns only for clarity or emphasis since context and verb endings tend to suffice for identifying the relevant person. The pronunciation will be "eh mer-KO-ley-DEE" in Pisan Italian.
Ti voglio! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I want you!" The statement may be preceded immediately by the first person singular io ("I") for emphasis even though context and verb endings make the speaker clear. The pronunciation will be "(EE-o) tee VO-lyo" in Pisan Italian.
Siamo felici! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "We are happy!" The first person plural subject pronoun noi ("we") need not be included, other than for emphasis, since context and verb endings tend to make the subject clear in Italian. The pronunciation will be "SYA-mo fey-LEE-tchee" in Italian.
Era una bella giornata! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "It was a beautiful day!" The exclamation models a tendency for Italian not to include pronouns when context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "EY-ra OO-na BEL-la djor-NA-ta" in Italian.
È bello qui! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "It's beautiful here!" The declarative/exclamatory sentence models a difference between the two languages whereby Italian -- in contrast to English -- may not include pronouns when context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "eh BEL-lo kwee" in Italian.
Mangerò is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I will eat." The first person singular future indicative need not be preceded by the first person singular pronoun io ("I") -- except for emphasis -- since context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "MAN-djey-RO" in Italian.
Siamo la squadra! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "We are the team!" The exclamation may be preceded immediately by noi ("we") even though subject pronouns are not required when context and verb endings serve clarity and emphasis. The pronunciation will be "SYA-mo la SKWA-dra" in Pisan Italian.