Oggi vorrei passeggiare sulla spiaggia con una ragazza in Italian means "Today I would like to walk on the beach with a girl" in English.
"Seaside" in English is spiaggia in Italian
"Where is the beach?" in English is Dov'è la spiaggia? in Italian.
"Let's go to the beach Saturday!" in English is Andiamo alla spiaggia sabato! in Italian.
The words sula spiaggia are Italian for Beach.
Spiagge is an Italian equivalent of the English word "beaches." The feminine plural noun, which may be found misspelled as spiaggie, may be preceded immediately by the feminine plural le since Italian employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ley) SPYAD-zhey" in Pisan Italian.
Camminata and passeggiata as a feminine noun and camminare and passeggiare as a present infinitive are Italian equivalents of the English word "walk." The above-mentioned nouns and verbs also translate into English as "stroll." The pronunciation will be "KAM-mee-NA-ta" and "PAS-sed-DJA-ta" as nouns and "KAM-mee-NA-rey" and "PAS-sed-DJA-rey" as verbs in Italian.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
"Out" in English is fuori in Italian.
"About" in English is circa in Italian.
"Or" in English is o in Italian.
Dov'è la bella spiaggia? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Where is the beautiful beach?" In colloquial, conversational, informal Italian, the adverb dove always loses its final vowel when the immediately following verb begins with e. The pronunciation will be "do-VEH la BEL-la SPYAD-dja" in Italian.
"Not italian" in English is non italiano in Italian.