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.
"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."
"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."
Diana is pronounced dee-AH-nah in German.
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.
A common English pronunciation is soo-NAH-meez.