Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 95. Chapters: Dalmatian language, Italian language, Neapolitan language, Sicilian language, Italian grammar, Glossary of musical terminology, List of English words of Italian origin, Italian profanity, Calabrian dialects, Italian verbs, Italianization, Italian phonology, Italian exonyms, Judeo-Italian languages, Italianization of South Tyrol, Italian honorifics, Latin Union, Italian alphabet, Ciao, List of Portuguese words of Italian origin, Baaria, Italian language in the United States, La Spezia-Rimini Line, Sicilian vowel system, Accademia della Crusca, Syntactic gemination, Accademia Italiana di Lingua, Veronese Riddle, Bari dialect, Italian language in Venezuela, Tarantino language, Italian language in Croatia, Istriot language, Renato Carosone, Italian Wikipedia, Dalmatian grammar, Southern Italian, Consorzio ICoN, CILS, Giambattista Basile, Marino Marini, Swiss Italian, Salentino, CELI, Prima donna, Italian language in Slovenia, Siculish, Neapolitan articles, Neapolitan Wikipedia, Tuone Udaina, Giulio Cesare Cortese, Farfallino Alphabet, Italian Language School La Scuola Appia Vecchia, Matteo Bartoli, Cilentan language, Cocoliche, Manduriano, Comme e ddoce 'o mare, Mazzarella, Giada Valenti, Baccagghju, Centro di studi filologici e linguistici siciliani, Florentine language, Italianism, Irpinian dialect, Italian Language Examinations. Excerpt: Sicilian (, Italian: , also known as Siculu or Calabro-Sicilian) is a Romance language. Its dialects make up the Italiano Meridionale-estremo language group, which are spoken on the island of Sicily and its satellite islands; in southern and central Calabria (where it is called Southern Calabro); in the southern parts of Apulia, the Salento (where it is known as Salentino); and Campania, on the Italian mainland, where it is called Cilentano (Gordon, 2005). Ethnologue (see below for m...