Grave Adagio (similar to Larghissimo, Lentissimo, seems to be Grave instead of Grava)
Largo Adagio
Lento Adagio
< p>Adagio AdagioLargetto Canto (did you type it wrong?)
Andante Andante
Andantino Andante
Moderato medium speed (that is, medium speed)
Allegretto small allegro
Allegro allegro (you seem to have typed this wrong? I guess it is not Alegoo but Allegro)
< p>Aivo, I don’t know what Aivace isI guess it’s Vivo and Vivace...
Vivace Lively Allegro (also known as Allegro)
Vivo...well. I don’t seem to have come across this speed term when I play the piano, but it is used in expression marks, "lively"...
Presto (you wrote Preato, I really don’t know what it is, so I have to guess this is it)
Prestissimo
The pronunciation...just read it according to Chinese Pinyin, it is almost the same...
First of all, don’t Grave With w and v, the e... is not "uh", but the e in the pinyin of "xie". It is not correct to say ai. The correct spelling in pinyin is ê.
Don’t pronounce the r in Largo as le like most Chinese people do. It’s hard to hear. Generally, people in some Western countries don’t use the vibrato, so they just pronounce it as r. Can you pronounce the English word Large? Just cut off the "ge" and change it to the pronunciation of "go", which is also an English word. The standard pronunciation of the o is not "欧" but "Oh". Most people in English-speaking countries do not read Italian well.
Similarly, Lento is pronounced len (no back nasal sound, refer to the final of "sen") -to (the o followed by "oh" after t is not uo).
...The following is not exhaustive, because changing the soup does not change the medicine. Remember to pronounce "oh" whenever "o" appears, and do not pronounce it as "uo" or "欧"...
When you encounter "e", pronounce it with a sound similar to the final of "xie". Don't pronounce "uh" or "eh", both of which sound unpleasant...
The letter "a" is always pronounced as "ah" , don’t pronounce it as “Hey”~
Another thing to note is the word Vivace. In addition to saying v instead of w, the ce on the right has the sound of “cut”, don’t pronounce it as “vegetable”! Read it in a way that no one can understand!
Andante: an-da-en-t-e, with the emphasis on "big"
Allegro: ah l-le-g-r-oh (it's weird to spell it this way, but remember to read it) a means curling up the tongue to pronounce l, because l needs to be emphasized when written twice, and g means that the final is removed from the song)
Presto: Don’t pronounce it as Bresto or anything like the following, pronounce it as p -re (yes ê not "hot") -s-to ("tuo" tuo remove the u in the middle)
Prestissimo: p-re-s-Tis-Siyi-Mo (pronounced m- Oh, such a sound)
The above is the official Italian pronunciation of northern Italy. If you want Italian with an American accent, a British accent, and an Indian accent, I don't have it -_-| || (Actually, there are some, just replace all the "oh"s with "europees")~~