Salute e felicità per sempre! and Sempre salute e felicità! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Health and happiness always!" The two toasts or wishes translate literally as "Health and happiness for always!" in the first case and "Always health and happiness!" in the second. The respective pronunciations will be "sa-LOO-tey fey-LEE-tchee-TA per SEM-prey" in the first case and "SEM-prey sa-LOO-tey fey-LEE-tchee-TA" in the second in Italian.
Buona salute per tutti! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Good health to all!" The greeting, toast or wish translates literally as "Good health for everybody (everyone, everything)!" in English. The pronunciation will be "BWO-na sa-LOO-tey per TOOT-tee" in Italian.
Huh... That's not Italian, it's French ;).... "A votre santé" is what you say when you make a toast. So, it could be translated as "Cheers", but the actual translation is "to your health". In the French tradition one toasts "A votre santé" and the rest of the group responds "a la votre" ("and to yours").
Dio ti benedica in the singular and Dio vi benedica in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "God bless." The blessing uses the second person informal singular for one "you" in the first instance and the second person informal plural for one "you" idiomatically and "you all" grammatically. The respective pronunciation will be "DEE-o tee BEY-ney-DEE-ka" in the singular and "DEE-o vee BEY-ney-DEE-ka" in the plural in Italian.
Je vous souhaite santé, bonheur et longue vie ensemble.
A very basic version reads: "Salud riqueza y felicidad y el tiempo para disfrutar de ellos"
¡Salud! It means health. You say "Jesús" in Spain but "salud" in Latin America.
"Health and happiness!" in English is Salute e felicità!in Italian.
"Good health" in English is buona salute in Italian.
sei in buona salute?
Salute is an Italian equivalent of the English word "health."Specifically, the word functions as a feminine noun in its singular form. It literally means "health, well-being." It also translates as "Bless you!" for a sneeze and "Cheers!" for a toast.Whatever the meaning, the pronunciation remains "sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
Alla salute! and Alla tua salute! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "To your health!" The feminine singular phrase translates literally as "To health!" in the first case and as "To your health!" in the second. The respective pronunciations will be "AL-la sa-LOO-tey" and "AL-la TOO-a sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
"Good health for 100 years!" in English is Cent'anni di buona salute! in Italian. The toast or wish also translates literally as "100 years of good health!" in English. The pronunciation will be "tchen-TAN-nee dee BWO-na sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
In buona salute is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in good health." The feminine singular prepositional phrase models a rare instance when the two languages resemble one another in sentence structure. The respective pronunciation will be "een BWO-na sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
"Good health" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase buona salute. The feminine singular adjective and noun also translate into English as "good well-being" in a more overall sense, with inclusion of emotional and spiritual elements. The pronunciation will be "BWO-na sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
"I hope to be in good health!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Io spero di essere in buona salute! The practical wish also translates into English as "I count on being in good health!" The pronunciation will be "EE-o SPEY-ro dee ES-sey-rey een BWO-na sa-LOO-tey" in Italian.
"Health" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase la santé. The feminine singular definite article and noun translate literally as "the health" even though English and Italian differ on when or not to use definite articles. The pronunciation will be "la saw-tey" in French.
Happiness is good for your health because if you were dead happiness would be sadness.
Servizi sanitari is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "health services".Specifically, the masculine noun servizi means "services". The masculine adjective sanitari translates as "health, hygienic, relative to health, sanitary". The pronunciation will be "ser-VEE-tsee SA-nee-TA-ree" in Italian.