Italian language
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Italian (Italiano) |
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Spoken in: |
Italy and 29 other countries |
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Total speakers: |
70 million |
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19-20 native (in a near tie with Urdu) |
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Indo-European |
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Official status |
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Official language of: |
Italy, European Union, Switzerland, San Marino, Slovenia, Vatican City, Istria county of Croatia |
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Language codes |
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it |
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ita |
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
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. Italian (Italian: italiano ▶(?)) is a Romance language spoken by about 70 million
people primarily in ItalyStandard
Italian is based on Tuscan dialects and is somewhat intermediate between the languages
of Southern
Italy and the Gallo-Romance languages of the North. The long-established
Tuscan standard has, over the last few decades, been slightly influenced by the
variety of Italian spoken in Milan, the economic center of Italy. Like many languages
written using the Latin alphabet, Italian has double consonants;
however, contrary to, for example, French
and Spanish, double consonants
are pronounced as long (geminated) in Italian. As in most Romance
languages (with the notable exception of French), stress is distinctive. Out of the Romance
languages, Italian is generally considered to be the one most closely
resembling Latin
in terms of grammar,
vocabulary
and pronunciation.
The history of the Italian language is
quite complex but the modern standard of the language was largely shaped by
relatively recent events. The earliest surviving texts which can definitely be
called Italian (as opposed to its predecessor Vulgar
Latin) are legal formulae from the region of Benevento dating from A.D.
960-963. Italian was first formalized in the 14th
century through the works of Dante
Alighieri, who mixed southern Italian dialects, especially Sicilian,
with his native Tuscan in his epic poems known collectively as the Commedia,
to which Boccaccio
later affixed the title Divina. Dante's much-loved works were read
throughout Italy and his written dialect became the canonical standard that
others could all understand. Dante is still credited with standardizing the
Italian language.
Italian has always had a distinctive
dialect for each city, since the cities were up until recently city-states.
Italians generally believe that the best spoken Italian is lingua toscana in
bocca romana - 'the Tuscan tongue, in a Roman mouth' (Tuscan dialects spoken
with Roman inflection). The Romans are known for speaking clearly and
distinctly, while the Tuscan dialect (supposedly derived from Etruscan
and Oscan),
is the closest existing dialect to Dante's now-standard Italian.
In contrast to the dialects of northern
Italy, the older southern Italian dialects were largely untouched by the
Franco-Occitan influences introduced to Italy, mainly by bards from France, during the
middle ages. (See La Spezia-Rimini Line.) The economic might
and relative advanced development of Tuscany at the
time (late middle ages), gave its dialect weight, though Venetian remained
widespread in medieval Italian commercial life. Also, the increasing cultural
relevance of Florence during the periods of 'Umanesimo' and Rinascimento
(Renaissance) made its vulgare (dialect) a standard in the arts.
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