nahh, nawh, nah.
The word "Phaenomena" is typically pronounced as "fee-NAH-meh-nah" with the stress on the second syllable.
"Nah nah" is a casual way of saying "no" or expressing disagreement. It is often used in informal conversations or slang language.
"Bueno" (Spanish for "good") sounds approximately like BWEH-no. However, if you listen carefully to the English word "no," you will hear that the "o" vowel glides toward a "u," or the "oo" of "boo." In Spanish, you whould avoid the glide at the end.
It is just Tina. On behindthename.com, I typed in Tina and this is what I found: CATELINE f Medieval French CATHERINE f French, English CHRISTELLE f French CHRISTIAN m English, French, German, Scandinavian CHRISTIANE f German, French CHRISTINE f French, English, German, Scandinavian, Dutch MARTIN m English, French, German, Scandinavian, Russian, Romanian, Czech, Slovak, Slovene, Croatian, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Finnish MARTINE f French, Dutch
Banana. (Pronounced bah-nah-nah)
DEE-nah
Possible translations: at-leech-nah. "Great Job" : "Maladets!" "Ocheen horoshow!" "Malacheena!" (also at-leech-nah)
Novice is an English word meaning someone that is new to an activity. It is pronounced in English as Nah-viss.
"Sleepy" is an English equivalent of the Italian word assonnato.Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "AHS-sohn-NAH-toh." The feminine form, assonnata, is pronounced "AHS-sohn-NAH-tah."
Nah, naw, nope, uh-uh, no way and... no (English) no (Spanish) nein (German) or you can go to ---> users.elite.net <---
nahh, nawh, nah.
Diana is pronounced dee-AH-nah in German.
"To sail" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "navigare."Specifically, the Italian word is an infinitive. It may be translated as "to cruise, to sail." The pronunciation is "NAH-vee-GAH-reh."
"Dwarf" is an English equivalent of the Italian word nana.Specifically, the Italian word can be the feminine form of an adjective. Or it may be a feminine noun. As a noun, its definite article is la ("the") and its indefinite una ("a, one").But either way, the pronunciation remains the same: "NAH-nah."
A common English pronunciation is soo-NAH-meez.
Appassionata in the feminine and appassionato in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "enthusiast".Specifically, the word is a noun in its singular form. The feminine form is pronounced "ah-PAHS-syoh-NAH-tah". The masculine form is pronounced "ah-PAHS-syoh-NAH-toh" in Italian.