Wiki Languages: Italian language (Italiano)

Updated: 17-07-2024 by Wikilanguages.net
☞ share facebook ☞ share twitter
Display language: Simple English (simple)
Language: Italian (Italian language)Local name: Italiano
Language code: it
Speak area: ItalyClassification: Romance
Country: ItalySecond language: Switzerland, San Marino
Usage: nationalWiki language for Italian language

Dictionary for Italian (Italiano) in Simple English

EnglishItalian
ItalianoSimple English
Italian
italiano, lingua italiana
Pronunciation[itaˈljaːno]
Native toItaly, Switzerland, San Marino, Vatican City, Slovenia (Slovenian Istria), Croatia (Istria County), and the Italian diaspora
Region(widely known among older people and in commercial sectors in Somalia, Eritrea, and Libya; used in the Federal Government of Somalia)
Native speakers
59 million Italian proper, native and native bilingual (2007)[1]
85 million all varieties[2]
Language family
Indo-European
  • Italic
    • Romance
      • Italo-Western
        • Italo-Dalmatian
          • Italian
Writing system
Latin (Italian alphabet)
Italian Braille
Official status
Official language in
wikilanguages.net European Union
wikilanguages.net Malta
wikilanguages.net Italy
wikilanguages.net  Switzerland
wikilanguages.net San Marino
wikilanguages.net  Vatican City
wikilanguages.net Slovenia (Slovenian Istria)
wikilanguages.net Croatia (Istria County)
wikilanguages.net Brazil (Talian dialect in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina)
Recognised minority
language in
wikilanguages.net Albania
wikilanguages.net Argentina
wikilanguages.net Australia
wikilanguages.net Bolivia
wikilanguages.net Brazil
wikilanguages.net Brunei
wikilanguages.net Chile
wikilanguages.net Eritrea
wikilanguages.net Ethiopia
wikilanguages.net Greece
wikilanguages.net Libya
wikilanguages.net Monaco
wikilanguages.net Montenegro
wikilanguages.net Papua New Guinea
wikilanguages.net Somalia
wikilanguages.net Solomon Islands
wikilanguages.net Tunisia
Regulated bynot officially by Accademia della Crusca
Language codes
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3ita
Linguasphere51-AAA-q
Where Italian is spoken in Europe
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
The Bible being read in Italian by a speaker from Milan
Woman speaking Italian and Sicilian

The Italian language is a Romance language spoken in Italy. Other countries that use Italian as their official language are San Marino, Vatican City and Switzerland. Slovenia, and Croatia also use Italian as an official language, but only in some regions. Italian is spoken by about 70 million people in several countries, including some parts of Monaco, Malta, Albania, Montenegro, Dodecanese (Greece), Eritrea, Libya, Ethiopia, Somalia, Tunisia. The standard version from Tuscany is used for most writing but other dialects are sometimes written.[3]

Spoken

It is mostly derived from Latin, with some words from Greek, Etruscan and elsewhere. It is called an inflected language - that means that the meaning of words can be changed by changing their endings. Italian nouns are either masculine or feminine in gender (these usually have little to do with natural genders).

Most singular masculine nouns end in -o, and most plural masculine nouns end in -i.

Most singular feminine nouns end in -a, and most plural feminine nouns end in -e.

So:

  • gatto = male cat
  • gatta = female cat
  • gatti = male cats
  • gatte = female cats

The ending of verbs are quite complicated because of conjugation. The endings depend upon the tense of the verb (past, present, future and so on) and on the person of the verb (I, you, they etc.). Because Italian grammar uses endings for these inflections, the personal pronoun is not always needed (in the following example it is in parenthesis).[4]

So:

  • (io) parlo = I speak
  • (noi) parliamo = we speak
  • (lui) parlava = he was speaking
  • (loro) parlarono = they spoke
  • (io) parlerò = I will speak
  • parliamo! = let's speak!

There are very many of these endings to learn - it is one of the more difficult parts of the Italian Grammar. But pronunciation is simple - there are just a few rules to learn, and hardly any difficult sounds.

Many Italian words for food have entered the English language, such as: pizza, spaghetti and ravioli. Many technical words in music are Italian, such as forte and allegro. Many musical instrument names are also Italian, such as cello and tuba. Mafia and vendetta come from the darker side of Italian culture.

Pidgin versions of the Italian language were developed in the colonies of Italy:[5] the most important were in Eritrea, Somalia and Libya.[6]

Further reading

  • Berloco, Fabrizio (2018). The Big Book of Italian Verbs: 900 Fully Conjugated Verbs in All Tenses. With IPA Transcription, 2nd Edition. Lengu. ISBN 9788894034813.
  • Palermo, Massimo (2015). Linguistica italiana. Il Mulino. ISBN 9788815258847.
  • Simone, Raffaele (2010). Enciclopedia dell'italiano. Treccani.

References

  1. Nationalencyklopedin "Världens 100 största språk 2007" The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007
  2. Eurobarometer – Europeans and their languagesPDF (485 KB), February 2006
  3. Simone 2010
  4. Berloco 2018
  5. "Pidgin italiani"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 2011-06-26. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  6. Italian language pidgins in Italy's colonies

Other websites

  • Italian grammar and interactive course
  • Italian proverbs
  • Italian Learning TipsArchived 2021-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • Italian Grammar PrimerArchived 2008-04-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Italian Online Dictionaries and GlossariesArchived 2007-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • A dictionary of Italian orthography and pronunciation
  • English-Italian Dictionary and English-Italian Dictionary on http://www.wordreference.com/

All Languages for you

Other languages

Abkhazian Acehnese Adyghe Afrikaans Akan Albanian Alemannic Amharic Anglo-Saxon Arabic Aragonese Aramaic Armenian Aromanian Assamese Asturian Atikamekw Avar Awadhi Aymara Azerbaijani Balinese Bambara Banjar Banyumasan Bashkir Basque Bavarian Belarusian Belarusian-Taraskievica Bengali Bhojpuri Bishnupriya_Manipuri Bislama Bosnian Breton Buginese Bulgarian Burmese Buryat Cantonese Catalan Cebuano Central_Bicolano Chamorro Chechen Cherokee Cheyenne Chichewa Chinese Chuvash Classical_Chinese Cornish Corsican Cree Crimean_Tatar Croatian Czech Dagbani Danish Dinka Divehi Doteli Dutch Dutch_Low_Saxon Dzongkha Egyptian_Arabic Emilian-Romagnol English Erzya Esperanto Estonian Ewe Extremaduran Faroese Fiji_Hindi Fijian Finnish Franco-Provencal French Friulian Fula Gagauz Galician Gan Georgian German Gilaki Goan_Konkani Gorontalo Gothic Greek Greenlandic Guarani Guianan_Creole Gujarati Gun Haitian Hakka Hausa Hawaiian Hebrew Hill_Mari Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Ido Igbo Ilokano Inari_Sami Indonesian Ingush Interlingua Interlingue Inuktitut Inupiak Irish Italian Jamaican_Patois Japanese Javanese Kabardian_Circassian Kabiye Kabyle Kalmyk Kannada Kapampangan Karachay-Balkar Karakalpak Kashmiri Kashubian Kazakh Khmer Kikuyu Kinyarwanda Kirghiz Kirundi Komi Komi-Permyak Kongo Korean Kotava Kurdish Ladin Ladino Lak Lao Latgalian Latin Latvian Lezgian Ligurian Limburgish Lingala Lingua_Franca_Nova Lithuanian Livvi-Karelian Lojban Lombard Low_Saxon Lower_Sorbian Luganda Luxembourgish Macedonian Madurese Maithili Malagasy Malay Malayalam Maltese Manx Maori Marathi Mazandarani Meadow_Mari Meitei Min_Dong Min_Nan Minangkabau Mingrelian Mirandese Moksha Mon Mongolian Moroccan_Arabic NKo Nahuatl Nauruan Navajo Neapolitan Nepali Newar Nias Norfolk Norman North_Frisian Northern_Sami Northern_Sotho Norwegian-Bokmal Norwegian-Nynorsk Novial Occitan Old_Church_Slavonic Oriya Oromo Ossetian Palatinate_German Pali Pangasinan Papiamentu Pashto Pennsylvania_German Persian Picard Piedmontese Polish Pontic Portuguese Punjabi Quechua Ripuarian Romani Romanian Romansh Russian Rusyn Sakha Sakizaya Samoan Samogitian Sango Sanskrit Santali Saraiki Sardinian Saterland_Frisian Scots Scottish_Gaelic Seediq Serbian Serbo-Croatian Sesotho Shan Shona Sicilian Silesian Simple_English Sindhi Sinhalese Slovak Slovenian Somali Sorani South_Azerbaijani Southern_Altai Spanish Sranan Sundanese Swahili Swati Swedish Tachelhit Tagalog Tahitian Tajik Tamil Tarantino Tatar Tayal Telugu Tetum Thai Tibetan Tigrinya Tok_Pisin Tongan Tsonga Tswana Tulu Tumbuka Turkish Turkmen Tuvan Twi Udmurt Ukrainian Upper_Sorbian Urdu Uyghur Uzbek Venda Venetian Vepsian Vietnamese Volapuk Voro Walloon Waray-Waray Welsh West_Flemish West_Frisian Western_Armenian Western_Punjabi Wolof Wu Xhosa Yiddish Yoruba Zamboanga_Chavacano Zazaki Zeelandic Zhuang Zulu
🔝