"Hi, cousin! (See you) shortly!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ciao, cugino! A presto! The greeting, masculine singular noun, and adverbial phrase also may be heard as a closing promise for a speaker to see a male cousin in a little while since ciao translates into English as "bye," "goodbye," "hello" or "hi" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tchow koo-DJEE-no a PREH-sto" in Italian.
"Hello to your cousin!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ciao al tuo cugino!
Specifically, the greeting ciao is "bye, goodbye" or "hello, hi" depending upon context. The word al means "to the", from the combination of the preposition a ("to") with the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The masculine possessive adjective tuo means "(informal singular) your". The masculine noun cugino translates as "(male) cousin".
The pronunciation will be "tchow* ahl TOO-oh koo-DJEE-noh" in Italian.
*The sound is similar to that in the English adverb "how".
Traduzione dall'italiano all'inglese is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italian to English translation." The prepositional phrase translates literally into English as "translation from the Italian to the English." The pronunciation will be "TRA-doo-TSYO-ney dal-LEE-ta-LYA-no al-leen-GLEY-zey" in Italian.
"My new cousin is cute, isn't he?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mio cugino nuovo è carino, vero?Specifically, the masculine possessive adjective mio is "my". The masculine noun cugino means "(male) cousin". The verb è means "is" in this context. The masculine adjective carino means "cute, pretty". The word vero translates literally as "true" but as "isn't he" here since it is an abbreviated form of the question non è vero? ("is it not true?")The pronunciation will be "MEE-oh koo-DJEE-noh NWOH-voh eh kah-REE-noh VEY-roh" in Italian.
molto bene
Traduzione dall'inglese all'italiano is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "English to Italian translation." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "translation from the English to the Italian" in English. The pronunciation will be "TRA-doo-TSYO-ney dal-leen-GLEY-zey al-LEE-ta-LYA-no" 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.
Scrivere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to write".Specifically, the word is a verb. It is in the present infinitival form. The pronunciation will be "SKREE-ve-re" in Italian.
Volere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to wish".Specifically, the word is a verb. It is the form of the present infinitive. The pronunciation will be "voh-LEY-rey" in Italian.
Vedere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to see".Specifically, the word is a verb. It is in the form of the present infinitive. The pronunciation will be "vey-DEY-rey" in Italian.
Ci sarò is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I will be there".Specifically, the adverb ci means "there". The verb sarò translates as "(I) will be". The pronunciation will be "TCHEE sa-RO" in Italian.
Volere is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to like".Specifically, the word is a verb. It is in the form of the present infinitive. The pronunciation will be "voh-LEY-rey" in Italian.
Adesso mi conosci.
"To have faith" is a literal English translation of the Italian phrase Avere fede.Specifically, the present infinitive avere means "to have". The feminine noun fedetranslates as "faith". The pronunciation will be "ah-VEY-rey FEY-dey" in Italian.