REYE*-ahn is an Italian pronunciation of 'Ryan'. The name isn't native to Italy. It's the foreign and loan words that tend to be spelled with the letter 'y'.
*The sound 'eye' is similar to the sound in the English noun 'eye'.
Our daughter is named Tiffanie and when we were in Italy, they called her Tiffanie with the i pronounced as the English long E and the "anie" pronounced like "phony". They told me there was no Italian name comparable so they pronounced her name as best they could. We were in Sicily....
The name Johanna Mathieson is pronounced in Italian the same way as in English as Johanna Mathieson.
Yes it is although in Italian it is written 'Giulia' but pronounced exactly the same as in English.
Goffredo is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Jefferi".Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun of Germanic origin (Gottfried, "God's peace"). It is pronounced "Gohf-FREY-doh" in Italian. Its feminine equivalent, Goffreda, is pronounced "Gohf-FREY-dah" in Italian.
In Danish, the name "Ryan" would be spelled and pronounced the same way as in English.
'Paula' is an English equivalent of 'Paola'. It's pronounced 'POW-lah' in Italian. Many Italian names have feminine and masculine equivalents. The masculine form 'Paolo' is pronounced 'POW-loh'.
"Henry" is an English equivalent of the Italian name Enrico.Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun. The pronunciation will be "eyn-REE-koh" in Italian. The feminine equivalent, Enrica, will be pronounced "eyn-REE-kah" in Italian.
Ryan is an English loan name in Italian. The feminine/masculine forename or surname originates in the Irish Gaelic Rían, which translates into English as "little king" and Italian as piccolo re or sovranino. The respective pronunciations in Italian will be "REE-an" or "REYE-an" for the loan name and "PEEK-ko-lo reh" and "SO-vra-NEE-no" for the literal Italian translations.
Loglia is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Rylynn." The English proper noun in question originates in the designation of a field of rye grasses. The Italian equivalent will be pronounced "LO-lya."
In English we say "DAN-tay", with the emphasis on the first syllable, and the first "a" as short - as in the the name Dan. In Italian it comes out pretty similar. It is pronounced "Dàhnteh" in Italian as in English.
Pietro is the Italian equivalent of the English name "Peter."Specifically, the Italian name is a masculine proper noun. It may be pronounced "PYEH-troh." The feminine equivalent for a woman, Pietra, will be pronounced "PYEH-trah."
Vanessa is the same in English and Italian.Specifically, the English and the Italian names are feminine proper nouns. They are pronounced more or less the same in both languages. In Italian, the pronunciation will be "vah-NEHS-sah."