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  1. The languages of Italy include Italian, which serves as the country's national language, in its standard and regional forms, as well as numerous local and regional languages, most of which, like Italian, belong to the broader Romance group. The majority of languages often labeled as regional are distributed in a continuum across the regions ...

  2. Loch Lomond. El Loch Lomond (en gaélico escocés Loch Laomainn) es un lago (o loch en gaélico) de Escocia, que se localiza al oeste de la región, al sur de las Tierras Altas de Escocia. Forma parte simultáneamente de las regiones de Stirling, de Argyll and Bute y de West Dunbartonshire, situándose a 23 km al norte de la ciudad de Glasgow .

  3. Made in Italy brand has been used since 1980 to indicate the international uniqueness of Italy in four traditional industries: fashion, food, furniture and mechanical engineering ( automobiles, industrial design, machineries and shipbuilding ), in Italian also known as "Four A", Abbigliamento (clothes), Agroalimentare (food), Arredamento ...

  4. Little Italy ("la Pequeña Italia", en castellano) es un barrio en el centro ( Downtown) de San Diego, California, donde predominaban pescadores italianos. Desde ese entonces el barrio se ha "gentrificado" y ahora se ha convertido en un barrio escénico compuesto de restaurantes italianos, tiendas italianas, galerías de arte, tiendas para el ...

  5. Stellantis Italy (anteriormente Fiat Group Automobiles (2007- 2014) y FCA Italy S.p.A. (2014-2021)) es una empresa italiana de diseño, fabricación y comercialización de automóviles y vehículos comerciales ligeros, con sede en Mirafiori, Turín, Italia.

  6. Telephone numbers in Italy. Telephone numbers in Italy are managed by the Autorità per le Garanzie nelle Comunicazioni (AGCOM), a national regulatory authority for the communication industry located in Rome . Italian telephone numbers are defined by an open telephone numbering plan that assigns subscriber telephone numbers of six to eleven digits.

  7. Lautsi v. Italy was a case brought before the European Court of Human Rights, which, on 18 March 2011, ruled that the requirement in Italian law that crucifixes be displayed in classrooms of schools does not violate the European Convention on Human Rights. [1] [2] [3]