Grazie per il tuo messaggio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you for your message."
Specifically, the interjection grazie means "thank you, thanks." The preposition per means "for." The masculine singular definite article il means "the." The masculine possessive adjective tuo means "your." The masculine noun messaggio means "message."
The pronunciation is "GRAH-tsyeh peh-reel TOO-oh mehs-SAHDJ-djyoh."
Ringraziare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to thank".Specifically, the Italian word is a verb in its form as the present infinitive. It translates as "to be grateful, to give thanks, to thank". The pronunciation will be "REEN-grah-TSYAH-rey" in Italian.
Grazie, Jan! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, Jan!"Specifically, the interjection grazie means "thank you, thanks". Jan serves as an English loan name in Italian. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey DJAN" in Italian.
Sì, e grazie! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Yes, and thank you!"Specifically, the adverb sì is "yes". The conjunction e means "and". The interjection grazie translates as "thank you, thanks".The pronunciation will be "see ey GRA-tsye" in Italian.
"Thank you so much!" in English means Grazie mille! in Italian.
"Thank you for your message" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Grazie per il tuomessaggio.Specifically, the interjection grazie means "thank you, thanks." The preposition per means "for." The masculine singular definite article il means "the." The masculine possessive adjective tuo means "your." The masculine noun messaggio means "message."The pronunciation is "GRAH-tsyeh peh-reel TOO-oh mehs-SAHDJ-djyoh."
Grazie, amore mio! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, my love!"Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The masculine noun amore means "love". The masculine possessive adjective mio translates as "my".The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsye a-MO-re MEE-o" in Italian.
"Notes" is an English equivalent of the Italian word note.Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its plural form. It refers to the "notes" of message-writing and of music. The pronunciation will be "NO-tey" in Italian.
"No thank you!" in English means No, grazie! in Italian.
'Grazie per parlare' is an Italian equivalent of 'Thank you for speaking'. It isn't a literal translation, because the verb 'parlare' is the infinitive form, and translates as 'to speak, talk'. The phrase is pronounced 'GRAH-tsyeh pehr pahr-LAH-reh'.
"Why thank you?" in English means Perché grazie? in Italian.
Grazie, il mio stallone italiano! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, my Italian stallion!"Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks." The masculine singular definite article il -- which may be dropped in colloquial, conversational, rapid Italian -- means "the." The masculine possessive adjective miomeans "my." The masculine noun stallone means "stallion." The masculine adjective italiano translates as "Italian."The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey eel MEE-o stal-LO-ney-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Nota is an Italian equivalent of the English word "note".Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its singular form. It means "note" in the sense of message-writing and of music-notating. The pronunciation will be "NO-ta" in Italian.