Roman Italian
The Italian of Rome. A Central Italian variety widely heard through national cinema and television, occupying a middle position between Tuscan and Southern varieties.
Also known as: Italiano standard, Tuscan-based
The national standard of Italy, historically based on Florentine Tuscan. The reference variety in education and national media.
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Standard Italian is a dialect of Italian.
Standard Italian is part of the Europe region on DialectAtlas.
Yes — Standard Italian is also referred to as Italiano standard, Tuscan-based.
Italian also includes Romanesco, Neapolitan, Sicilian, Venetian, Lombard, Sardinian. Each variety has its own vocabulary, pronunciation, and cultural context.
Roman Italian
The Italian of Rome. A Central Italian variety widely heard through national cinema and television, occupying a middle position between Tuscan and Southern varieties.
Napulitano
The variety of Naples and surrounding Campania. Often classified as a distinct Italo-Romance language; a major literary and operatic medium.
Sicilianu
The variety of Sicily, often counted as a separate Italo-Romance language. Carries strong Greek, Arabic, Norman, and Spanish influences from the island's history.
Vèneto
The Romance variety of the Veneto region. Linguistically distinct enough from Italian that many linguists classify it as a separate language.
Lombardo
The Gallo-Italic variety of Lombardy and Italian-speaking Switzerland. Internally split between Western (Milan) and Eastern (Bergamo) groupings.
Sardu
The Romance variety of Sardinia. The most conservative Romance language, often cited as the closest living variety to Latin in several phonological respects.