"And you" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase E tu.
Specifically, the conjunction e is "and". The personal pronoun tu means "(informal singular) you". The pronunciation will be "ey too" in Italian.
Grazie, Jan! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, Jan!"Specifically, the interjection grazie means "thank you, thanks". Jan serves as an English loan name in Italian. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey DJAN" in Italian.
Sì, e grazie! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Yes, and thank you!"Specifically, the adverb sì is "yes". The conjunction e means "and". The interjection grazie translates as "thank you, thanks".The pronunciation will be "see ey GRA-tsye" in Italian.
"Thanks for the big kisses!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Grazie per I bacioni!Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The preposition per means "for". The masculine plural definite article i means "the". The masculine noun bacioni translates as "big kisses".The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey pey-ree ba-TCHO-nee" in Italian.
"Thank you! You're very beautiful!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Grazie. È bellissima!Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The verb è means "(formal singular you) are" in this context. The feminine adjective bellissima translates as "extremely, most, very beautiful".The pronunciation will be "ley eh behl-LEES-see-mah" 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 al cielo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank goodness!" The phrase translates literally as "Thanks to the heaven!" in English. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey al TCHEH-lo" in Pisan Italian.
Grazie, amore mio! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, my love!"Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The masculine noun amore means "love". The masculine possessive adjective mio translates as "my".The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsye a-MO-re MEE-o" in Italian.
"Yes, thank you!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Sì, grazie! The courtesy also translates as "Yes, thanks!" in English. The pronunciation will be "see GRA-tsyey" in Italian.
Grazie, madre! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, Mother!" The alternative, less formal translation as grazie as "Thanks!" most likely would be rendered as Grazie, mamma! ("Thanks, momma [ma, mom, mommie, mommy, mum, mummie]!"). The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MA-drey" in Pisan Italian.
"Many graces" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase molte grazie.Specifically, the feminine adjective molte means "many." The feminine noun grazie literally translates as "graces." Italian-Americans and Italians who know English will be known to use the phrase molte grazie and grazie molte to mean "many thanks" even though the really Italian way of saying that is grazie mille ("1,000 thanks").The pronunciation will be "MOL-tey GRA-tsyey" in Italian.
"Thanks for sharing... is an English equivalent of the incomplete Italian phrase Grazie per condividere... .Specifically, the interjection/noun grazie means "thank you, thanks." The preposition per means "for." The infinitive condividere means "to share."The pronunciation is "GRAH-tsyeh pehr KOHN-dee-VEE-deh-reh."
"A thousand thanks, Beautiful" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mille grazie, Bella.Specifically, the number mille means "thousand." The feminine noun grazie means "thanks." The feminine adjective/pronoun bella means "beautiful, handsome."The pronunciation is "MEEL-leh GRAH-tsyeh BEHL-lah."