"What are you eating?" is an English equivalent of the Itailan phrase Che stai mangiando?
Specifically, the interrogative che means "what." The present progressive stai mangiando means "(informal singular You) are (busy) eating." The pronunciation is "keh steye* mahn-DJYAHN-doh."
*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
"What time?" is an English equivalent of the Italian question "Che ora?"Specifically, the interrogative "che" means "what." The feminine noun "ora" means "hour, time." The pronunciation is "keh OH-rah.'
"What time?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Che ora? The interrogative and feminine singular noun also translate into English as "What hour?" The pronunciation will be "key O-ra" in Italian.
Che ora è? is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What time is it?" The pronunciation of the interrogative -- which translates literally as "What hour is it?" -- will be "key O-ra EH" in Italian.
"What time is it in Sicily?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase A che ora è Sicilia?Specifically, the preposition a means "at, to." The interrogative pronoun che means "what." The feminine noun ora means "hour, time." The verb è means "(He/she/it) is, (formal singular You) are." The feminine noun Sicilia means "Sicily."The pronunciation is "ah keh OH-rah eh see-TCHEE-lyah."
Per ora, sì! in Italian means "Yes, for now!" in English.
"Hour" in English means ora in Italian.
"No, not now!" in English is No, non ora! in Italian.
The toast that James Bond says in Italian about living in the moment in "The Man with the Golden Gun" is Per ora e per il momento che verrà ("To this moment, and the moment yet to come").
"For now" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase per ora. The prepositional phrase translates literally into English as "for (the) hour (right now)." The pronunciation will be "pey-RO-ra" in Italian.
Anche se appena per ora... in Italian means "Also if just for now..." in English.
Ora specifically and tempo generally are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "time." The feminine singular noun in question means "hour" whereas the masculine singular noun includes "duration," "interval," "time period," and "weather" among its definitions. The respective pronunciations will be "O-ra" and "TEM-po" in Italian.
A che ora mangiamo? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What time are we eating?" The interrogative in the first person plural of the present indicative literally means "At what hour are we eating (do we eat)?" The pronunciation will be "a key O-ra man-DJA-mo" in Italian.