i love you so much
but is just like friends.
You can say "Riposa bene" in Italian to mean "Rest well."
In English, "si sono molto dolce" translates to "they are very sweet."
"Bene" is a prefix, not a suffix. It means good, well.
From what I've learned, in Italian mitica means legendary, mythical, great, and as an exclamation/slang it means awesome like for ex.: "miticaaaaaa, stupenda canzone! Mi piace molto!" or "Awesomeeeeee, wonderful song! I really like it!"
The root "bene" means "good" or "well." It is commonly used in words like benevolent (showing kindness) and beneficial (having a good effect).
Molto Gentile is Italian for very kind.
Molto espressivo is Italian for very expressive.
In the Italian language, the word bene means something is good or okay. The phrase Mono bene means very good.
it means OKAY in Italian
"Give tickets nicely!" and "He (she) gives tickets nicely" or "You give tickets nicely" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Multa bene. The first case demonstrates the present imperative in the second person informal singular, with the additional possible translation of "Fine nicely (really, well)!" whereas the second illustrates the present indicative in the third person singular and the third the second person formal singular. Regardless of context or meaning, the pronunciation will be "MOOL-ta BEH-ney" in Italian.
it means "Live well, laugh often, love much"
I think 'tutto bene' is Italian for: 'All's well' or 'it's all good'.
it means very cold its about the weather
Non bene is an Italian equivalent of 'not well'. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The adverb 'bene' means 'well'. Together, they're pronounced 'nohn BEH-neh'.
You can say "Riposa bene" in Italian to mean "Rest well."
"Benjamin" in English is Beniamino in Italian.
"I'm much better without you." It's Italian.