My, good day to you, Suzuya-san.You could tell? I've gotten some perfume, so I tried wearing some.Perfume?
It'll be my pleasure.
Tiempe Passate.
...You smell cray good today, eh.
Please teach me about perfumes too, eh!!
It means "nostalgia of times past" in Italian.
That's how it's marketed in Japan, but technically "tiempe passate" means "time passes" in Neapolitan. It is, however, the title of a love song, with the remaining words being "time passes, but memories don't", so the translation gets the implied meaning across.