Cent'anni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase one hundred (100) years."
Specifically, the noun cento* means "hundred (100)." The masculine noun anni means "years." The pronunciation is "tchehn-TAHN-nee."
*The vowel o drops before the vowel of the following noun.
cint'anni = 100 years and the reply would be: cent'anni de una 101 (to you)
"100 years" is an English equivalent of the Italian-American phrase "Gin Dan."Specifically, the word "gin" represents the Italian masculine noun cento* ("one hundred, 100"). The word "dan" stands for the Italian masculine noun anni ("years"). The pronunciation is "tchehn-TAHN-nee."*The final vowel drops and is replaced by an apostrophe before a noun which begins with a vowel.
Che tu possa vivere cent'anni! or Possa tu vivere cent'anni! in the singular, Che voi possiate vivere cent'anni! or Possiate vivere cent'anni! in the plural and Cent'anni! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "May you live to be 100!" Birthplace, context and personal preference determine whether one "you" (cases 1, 2, 5) or two or more "you all" (examples 3, 4, 5) suits for what translates literally as "That you may live 100 years!" (instances, 1, 3), "May you live 100 years" (options 2, 4) and "100 years!" (sample 5). The respective pronunciations will be "key too POS-sa VEE-vey-rey tchen-TAN-nee" or "POS-sa too VEE-vey-rey tchen-TAN-nee" in the singular, "Key voy pos-SYA-tey VEE-vey-rey tchen-TAN-nee" or "pos-SYA-tey VEE-vey-rey tchen-TAN-nee" and "tchen-TAN-nee" in Pisan Italian.
over 100
Venisti, vidisti, vincesti! in the singular and Veniste, vidiste, vinceste! in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You came, you saw, you conquered!" The declarative/exclamatory statement, which uses Italian's historical remote past tense, paraphrases Gaius Julius Caesar's (July 13, 100 BC - March 15, 44 BC) statement to the Senate -- "I came, I saw, I conquered" -- regarding victory against Pharnaces II of Pontus (97 B.C.? - 47 B.C.?) in 49 B.C. The respective pronunciations will be "vey-NEE-stee "vee-DEE-stee veen-TCHEY-stee" to one "you" and "vey-NEE-stey vee-DEE-stey veen-TCHEY-stey" to two or more "you all" in Italian.
There aren't any published translations, but if you go to related links, you'll find a google translated website. It's not 100% accurate, but it'll give you an idea.
"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.
"100 years" is an English equivalent of the Italian-American phrase Gen don! The toast represents a colloquial, conversational, friendly, informal, slang form of Cent'anni ("one hundred years"). The pronunciation will be "tchen-TAN-nee" in Pisan Italian and "djen DAHN" in Italian-American.
"Hectogram" is an English equivalent of the Italian word etto. The masculine singular noun references a weight of 100 grams (3.53 ounces). The pronunciation will be "ET-to" in Italian.
Cent'anni di più! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "100 years more!" The phrase models an instance where Italian drops an ending vowel of one word, inserts an apostrophe to indicate the drop, and merges the first word with a second beginning with a vowel so that cento anni ("one hundred years") becomes cent'anni. The pronunciation will be "tchen-TAN-nee dee pyoo" in Pisan Italian.
Centroquattro is an Italian equivalent of the English word "104." The number represents the combination of cento("one hundred," "100") and quattro ("four," "4"). The pronunciation will be "TCHEN-to-KWAT0-tro" in Italian.
Cento domande is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "one hundred (100) questions." The pronunciation of the invariable number and the feminine plural noun will be "TCHEN-to do-MAN-dey" in Italian.
I numeri da uno a cento is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the numbers from 1 to 100." The phrase models a rare instance of English and Italian phrase or sentence structure resembling one another most recognizably. The pronunciation will be "ee NOO-mey-ree da OO-no a TCHEN-to" in Pisan Italian.
Quattrocentocinquanta is an Italian equivalent of the English word "450." The components quattro, cento, and cinquanta respectively translate into English as "four (4)," "hundred (100)," and "fifty (50)." The pronunciation will be "KWAT-tro-TCHEN-to-tcheen-KWAN-ta" in Italian.
Trecentosei is an Italian equivalent of the English number "306." The number merges the numbers tre ("three," "3"), cento ("hundred," "100") and sei ("six," "6"). The pronunciation will be "tre-TCHEN-to-sey" in Pisan Italian.
Trecentonovanta is an Italian equivalent of "three hundred ninety (390)" in English. The number represents the combination of tre ("three," "3"), cento ("hundred," "100"), and novanta ("ninety," "90"). The pronunciation will be "trey-TCHEN-to no-VAN-ta" in Italian.
Pasta con ciento cipolle is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "pasta with 100 onions." The word for "hundred" in Italian shows only one invariable form as an adjective or as a noun, regardless of the gender of the 100 individuals or objects being so counted. The pronunciation will be "PA-sta kon TCHEN-to tchee-POL-ley" in Italian.
Duecentocinque dolari is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "205 dollars." The phrase combines due("two"), cento ("100") and cinque ("five"). The pronunciation will be "DOO-ey-TCHEN-to-TCHEEN-kwey DO-la-ree" in Pisan Italian.