Casa sull'albero is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "tree house."
Specifically, the feminine noun casa is "house." The word sull'* means "in the" from the combination of the preposition su ("above, on, over") with the masculine singular definite article l' ("the"). The masculine noun albero translates as "tree."
The pronunciation will be "KA-sa sool LAL-bey-ro" in Italian.
*The apostrophe appears when the masculine singular definite article il changes to l' before a noun whose spelling begins with a vowel.
Un casone is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a large house".
Specifically, the masculine singular indefinite article un is "a". The masculine noun casone means "large house" through the combination of the feminine noun casa("house") and the suffix -one ("big, great, large"). The pronunciation will be "oon ka-SO-ney" in Italian.
Grande bianca in the feminine and grande bianco in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "large white."
Specifically, the feminine/masculine adjective grandemeans "big, great, large." The feminine adjective biancaand the masculine bianco translate as "white." The respective pronunciations will be "GRAN-dey BYAN-ka" in the feminine and "GRAN-dey BYAN-ko" in the masculine.
Grosso guaio is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "big trouble."Specifically, the masculine adjective grosso means "big, grand, large, major." The masculine noun guaiotranslates as "mess, predicament, trouble. " The pronunciation will be "GROS-so GUEYE-o"* in Italian.*The pronunciation is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
Quanto grande? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "How big?" The question also translates literally as "How large?" in English. The pronunciation will be "KWAN-to GRAN-dey" in Pisan Italian.
Macchinone is an Italian equivalent of the English term "big car".Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It is formed by combining the feminine noun macchina ("car") with the ending -one ("big, great, large"). The pronunciation will be "MAK-kee-NO-ne" in Italian.
"The large cellar" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Il cantinone. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase -- which most famously occurs as a restaurant name in Italy and which also translates as "the large basement (wine cellar, wine pub)" -- will be "eel KAN-tee-NO-ney" in Italian.
"Large" in English means grande in the singular and grandi in the plural in Italian.
Donnona is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "big woman." It represents the combination of the feminine singular noun donna ("woman") with the feminine suffix -ona("big, large"). The pronunciation will be "don-NO-na" in Italian.
Sono grande come un cavallo! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I am large like a horse!" The declaration may be made by either a female or male. The pronunciation will be "SO-no GRAN-dey KO-mey oon ka-VAL-lo" in Pisan Italian.
Catenaccio in Italian means "large chain" in English.
"Extra-large" is an English equivalent of the Italian word extra-largo.Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "EHK-strah-LAHR-goh." The feminine form, extra-larga, is pronounced "EHK-strah-LAHR-gah."
Grande scrivania and scrivania grande are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "large desk." Context makes clear whether emphasizing the largeness more (case 1) or less (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "GRAN-dey SKREE-va-NEE-a" and "SKREE-va-NEE-a GRAN-dey" in Italian.
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Mammone is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Momma's boy."Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It is formed by adding the ending -one ("big, great, large") to the feminine noun mamma ("ma, mom, mommie"). The pronunciation will be "mam-MO-ney" in Italian.