Paradiso
"Heaven" in English means cielo in Italian.
"A little slice of heaven" in English is una piccola fetta di paradiso in Italian.
"Of the heaven" or "the heaven's" can be English equivalents of the Italian phrase del cielo.Specifically, the word del means "of the". The masculine noun cielo translates as "heaven, sky". The pronunciation will be "dehl TCHE-loh" in Italian.
Como caido del cielo... That's Italian, not Latin.
Mio Figlio un Regalo dal Cielo
Penny from heaven is set in a town outside of Brooklyn in 1953.
I know of no Italian film like this, but there is an Iranian film called Children of Heaven which features a plot like this.
One is the popular Italian Christmas hymn -"Tu scende dalle stellae".
Cielo azzurro terso is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "clear blue sky." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "clear blue heaven" in English. The pronunciation will be "TCHYEH-lo ad-DZOOR-ro TER-so" in Italian.
Grazie al cielo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank goodness!" The phrase translates literally as "Thanks to the heaven!" in English. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey al TCHEH-lo" in Pisan Italian.
Yes, 'Tiramisù' is Italian. Specifically, it's a dessert that's linked with the Venetian region, up in the northeast of the Italian peninsula. There are many stories as to why, where, when and by whom it was created. But many agree that the word combines the verb 'tira' with the personal pronoun 'mi' and the preposition 'su' to mean '[It] picks or pulls me up [to heaven]'.
Araceli is the same in English, Italian and Spanish.Specifically, the name functions as a Spanish loan name of Latin origins. It originates in the combination of the Latin words ara ("altar") and coeli ("heaven, sky"). The pronunciation will be "A-ra-TCHEY-lee" in Italian and "A-ra-SEY-lee" or "A-ra-THEY-lee" in Spanish.