In Italian is translates to festival or festa. Always remember that depending on the context of your sentences, the translation can vary. There may also be slang terminology if you were to travel to Italy. Keep in mind that online translators may not always be correct, they are a reflection of the exact words you have typed in.
Festa, festival, and sagra are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "festival." The first-mentioned feminine singular noun references popular street celebrations whereas the second-mentioned masculine singular noun and the third-mentioned feminine singular noun respectively refer to film and music celebrations and to religious occasions. The respective pronunciations will be "FEH-sta," "FEH-stee-val," and "SA-gra" in Italian.
It is: piccolo festival italiano.
Festa di Natale is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Christmas festival." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "celebration (feast, festival, holiday) of Christmas" in English. The pronunciation will be "FEH-sta dee na-TA-ley" in Italian.
When translated from English to Italian a raccoon is a procione
"About" in English is circa in Italian.
"Out" in English is fuori in Italian.
"Or" in English is o in Italian.
"Not italian" in English is non italiano in Italian.
"To have" in English means avere in Italian.
Alcuni festival italiani is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "some Italian festivals."Specifically, the word alcuni is "some." The masculine noun festival means "festival" in the singular and "festivals" in the plural. The masculine adjective italiani translates as "Italian."The pronunciation will be "al-KOO-nee FE-stee-va-LEE-ta-LYA-nee" in Italian.
"How is he?" in English is Come sta? in Italian.
"Who we are" in English is Chi siamo in Italian.
"About me!" in English is Su di me! in Italian.