Sembra delizioso is the translation in Italian Language. It is the fifth most taught language. It has more than 65 million native speakers.
Questo sembra delizioso! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "This looks delicious!"Specifically, the masculine singular pronoun questo is "this". The verb sembra means "does look, is looking, looks". The masculine adjective delizioso translates as "delicious".The pronunciation will be "KWEY-stoh SEHM-brah DEY-lee-TSYOH-soh" in Italian.
I'm beginning to fall for you (this is something that looks as it had already been translated from English)
"le temps de votre vie" is "the time of your life", but it looks like a literal translation from English, it is not something a French would say.
Unfortunately there is no mention of which language the word "Augellin"is from. I can not find an exact match but it looks very much like "Augelien", This is a baby talk version of the German word "Auge" which translated into English is "eye".
okay i don't know how to say it but this is how it looks in Japanese if that helps...ボルト i got this from babbelfish.com maybe you could look there a little more thouroughly than i did...
"She looks..." in English is Lei sembra... in Italian.
An eel is an elongated fish that looks like a snake.
"Sore ha oishisou."soh-reh wah oy-shee-SOH.
Sembra che non sono il tuo tutto
Finocchio in Italian slang translates to English as "homosexual" because the bulb looks like male genitals and the plant needs no cross-pollinization.
Chi è lei? is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Who is she?" The pronoun lei looks and sounds like the pronoun Lei, which translates into English as "(formal singular) you." The pronunciation will be "kee eh LEH-ee" in Italian.
"Wretch" is an English equivalent of the Italian word cristo. The masculine singular noun sounds and -- other than the lower-case initial letter -- looks the same as Cristo("Christ"). The pronunciation will be "KREE-sto" in Italian.
Roughly - parece delicioso
Sembra rilassata! and Sta rilassato! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Looks relaxed!" Context makes clear whether the feminine "She seems relaxed!" (case 1) or the masculine "He looks relaxed!" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "SEM-bra REE-las-SA-ta" in the feminine and "sta REE-las-SA-to" in the masculine in Pisan Italian.
Cugina carina for looks and cugina piacevolefor personality are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "lovely cousin." The respective pronunciations of the feminine singular phrases will be "koo-DJEE-na ka-REE-na" and "koo-DJEE-na pya-TCHEY-vo-ley" in Italian.
Calda in the feminine and caldo in the masculine for temperature and figa in the feminine and figo in the masculine for appearance are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "hot." The respective pronunciations of the two sets of feminine and masculine singular adjectives in Italian will be "KAL-da" and "KAL-do" for "hot" temperatures and weather and "FEE-ga" and "FEE-go" for "hot" looks.
looks