Giovane is an Italian equivalent of "young man."
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine gender noun. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "DJOH-vah-ney" in Italian.
Signorina is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "young lady." The feminine singular noun literally means "little lady" and also translates as "Miss" in English. The pronunciation will be "SEE-nyo-REE-na" in Pisan Italian.
Bellissimo uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hot man!" The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "Gorgeous man!" or "Handsomest man!" and will be heard alongside slangy, trendy phrases that come and go, often with double meanings. The pronunciation will be "bel-LEES-see-mo WO-mo" in Pisan Italian.
The answer for a young man is : jeune homme or , for a boy , jeune garçon.
uomo
Che bell'uomo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What a handsome man!" The masculine singular exclamatory statement translates literally into English as "That handsome man!" and "What (a) handsome man!" The pronunciation will be "key bel-LWO-mo" in Italian.
"Quando ero giovane." (When I was young) or "Quando ero un ragazzino/una ragazzina." (When I was a little boy/girl.)
Bellissimo giovane! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hot man!" The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "Gorgeous young man!" or "Handsomest youth!" in English. The pronunciation will be "bel-LEES-see-mo DJO-va-ney" in Pisan Italian.
No flowers to an Italian man.
"Boy" is an English equivalent of the Italian word ragazzo. The masculine singular noun also translates into English as "boyfriend" and "young man" according to context. The pronunciation will be "ra-GAT-tso" in Italian.
"Strong man" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Genco. The pronunciation of the masculine proper noun -- whose origins trace back to the Latin masculine singular noun iuvencus ("young castrated bull," "young man") -- will be "DJEN-ko" regardless of whether its use is as a first, middle, or last name.
"Little man" in Italian is "Omino."
Uomo italiano is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Italian man." Just the word italiano may be used as long as contexts communicates that the "Italian" is a man, not something Italian, such as the language. The pronunciation will be "WO-mo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Pisan Italian.
"A married Italian man" in English is un italiano sposatoor un uomo sposato in Italian.
The best way an Italian man shows his interest to an Italian lady is to start a conversation with her, even asking her out on a date. If an Italian man wants to impress an Italian lady, he will cook for her or take her to an expensive restaurant.
giovanne
signorina
William Young Ottley has written: 'The Italian school of design' -- subject(s): Artists, Biography, Drawing, Italian, Italian Drawing
'A young man" would be the correct form. The article "a" is used in front of a noun beginning with a consonant (with a few exceptions).