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Definition of Italian-speaking
1. Adjective. Able to communicate in Italian.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Italian-speaking
Literary usage of Italian-speaking
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Italian Contribution to American Democracy by John Horace Mariano (1921)
"CHAPTER XV THE italian-speaking COLONY IN NEW YORK CITY INTRODUCTION—The
italian-speaking colony in New York City divides itself sharply into two groups, ..."
2. Descriptive Ethnology by Robert Gordon Latham (1859)
"CHAPTER V. Populations, other than Italian, speaking a Language derived from the
Latin. THE populations other than Italian, and, as such, the occupants of a ..."
3. Harvard Economic Studies by Harvard University Dept. of Economics (1919)
"For both Austria and Hungary, the census figures of italian-speaking population
are minima. (See the writings, among many, of Auerbach, M"/., ..."
4. The Roots of the War: A Non-technical History of Europe, 1870-1914, A.D. by William Stearns Davis, William Anderson, Mason Whiting Tyler (1918)
"The whole struggle of the italian-speaking people from the days of the first ...
The Trentino in the north center, Italian- speaking and located on the ..."
5. The Adventures of the Fourteen Points: Vivid and Dramatic Episodes of the by Harry Hansen (1919)
"Lord Bryce explained recently that in 1915 Austria offered Italy the italian-speaking
districts of the Tren- tino and those parts of the Tyrol which had an ..."
6. The Adventures of the Fourteen Points: Vivid and Dramatic Episodes of the by Harry Hansen (1919)
"In each instance, we find, Italy's claims grew in size. Lord Bryce explained
recently that in 1915 Austria offered Italy the italian-speaking districts of ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... the only one situated almost wholly on the southern slope of the Alps and
inhabited by a population of which the majority is Italian- speaking. ..."
8. The Extinction in Perpetuity of Armaments and War by Albert William Alderson (1908)
"Suppose, for instance, that the German-speaking Swiss (they are the most numerous)
were to start fighting the French- and italian-speaking Swiss. ..."