Historical Evolution
Post-Roman Italo-Romance diversified into regional dialects; Tuscan (Florence) gained prestige through literature. Unification (1861) promoted standard Italian in education, displacing diglossia with local varieties (Neapolitan, Sicilian, Venetian). Accademia della Crusca (1583) is the oldest linguistic academy still active.
Phonology
Italian has seven vowels in stressed syllables with consistent open/closed mid contrasts (e / ɛ, o / ɔ). Most words end in vowels, giving open syllable structure. Consonant gemination is phonemic (fatto vs fato). Stress is contrastive and orthographically unmarked except for accents.
Syntax
Italian is SVO with pro-drop and rich verbal inflection. Subjunctive mood remains in subordinate clauses; auxiliary selection (essere vs avere) governs perfect tense formation. Clitic pronouns may attach to verbs forming phonological words (portarlo).
Attributes
| Total Speakers | 85 M |
|---|---|
| L1 Native Speakers | 65 M |
| Number of Countries | 5 countries |
| Language Vitality Index | 9 scale |
| Web Domain Share (%) | 1 % |
| Language Family | Indo-European / Italic / Romance |
| Standard Script | Latin (Italian alphabet) |
| Grammatical Typology | SVO, Fusional |
| UNESCO Risk Category | Safe |