Dalmatian$18781$ - translation to ιταλικό
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Dalmatian$18781$ - translation to ιταλικό

TRIBE IN ROMAN TIMES
Delmatae; Delmetae; Delmatoi; Dalmatian people; Dalmatian tribes; Dalmati; Delmati
  • The Inscription of the Coh(ors) I (milliaria) Del(matarum) in [[Salona]].
  • Delmatae in Illyricum, {{circa}} 40 BC.

Dalmatian      
n. dalmata (residente della Dalmazia nella Iugoslavia occidentale); razza di cane
Salvia officinalis         
  • Sage seeds are very small and almost spherical in shape
  • Sage leaves are covered with fine hairs called [[trichome]]s
  • Painting from ''Koehler's Medicinal Plants'' (1887)
  • Single flower in close-up
  • The top side of a sage leaf – [[trichomes]] are visible
  • The underside of a sage leaf – more trichomes are visible on this side
  • A specimen of ''Salvia officinalis'' grown in a flowerpot
SPECIES OF PLANT, HERB
Common sage; Garden sage; Kitchen sage; Culinary sage; Dalmatian sage; Broadleaf sage; Icterina; Extrakta; Lavandulaefolia; Sage (herb); Sage leaf; Sage leaves
pianta annuale medicamentosa
romance languages         
  • Red}}
  • Romance languages and dialects
  • Romance languages in Europe
  • Romance languages in the World
  • isbn=978-80-89286-45-4}}</ref>
  • Chart of Romance languages based on structural and comparative criteria, not on socio-functional ones. FP: Franco-Provençal, IR: Istro-Romanian.
  • Number of native speakers of each Romance language, as fractions of the total 690 million (2007)
  • European extent of Romance languages in the 20th century
MODERN LANGUAGES THAT EVOLVED FROM VULGAR LATIN
RomanceLanguages; Romance language; Romanic languages; List of Romance languages; List of Eastern Romance languages; List of Italo-Western Romance languages; List of Gallo-Iberian languages; List of Gallo-Romance languages; List of Gallo-Italian languages; List of Gallo-Rhaetian languages; List of Rhaetian languages; List of Ibero-Romance languages; List of Oc languages; List of West Iberian languages; List of Asturo-Leonese languages; List of Castilian languages; List of Portuguese-Galician languages; List of Italo-Dalmatian languages; List of Southern Romance languages; List of Sardinian languages; Romance dialect; Romance Languages; Romance Language; Languages derived from Latin; Neolatine language; Romanic; Latin languages; Romantic Languages; Latin peoples (linguistic); Romantic Language; Romance-language; Latino Asian; Neolatin languages; Neo-Latin languages; Latin tongues; Romance tongues; Romanic language; Romlang; ISO 639:roa; Eastern and Southern Romance languages; Eastern and Southern languages; Neo Latin languages; New Latin languages; Neo-romance languages; Romance-speaking; Latinate languages; Latinate language; Romantic languages; Continental Romance languages; Neo-Romance; Neo-Romance languages; Neo-Romanic languages; Loanwords in Romance languages; The Romance languages; Neo-Romance peoples; Sound changes in Romance languages
lingue romanze, lingue appartenenti al gruppo neo-latino, come la lingua italiana, francese, spagnola, portoghese, rumena

Ορισμός

Dalmatian
(Dalmatians)
A Dalmatian is a large dog with short, smooth, white hair and black or dark brown spots.
N-COUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Dalmatae

The Delmatae, alternatively Dalmatæ, during the Roman period, were a group of Illyrian tribes in Dalmatia, contemporary southern Croatia and western Bosnia and Herzegovina. The region of Dalmatia takes its name from the tribe.

The Delmatae appear in historical record for the first time in 181 BC, when upon the death of their ruler Pleuratus III of the Illyrian kingdom, they refused to accept the rule of his son, Gentius and seceded. They expanded and came to include coastal Illyrian tribes like the Tariotes, the Hylli and the Nesti and increased their territory to the north against the Liburni. Conflict with Roman expansionism and its local allies in the eastern Adriatic began in 156-55 BC. The Roman–Dalmatae Wars lasted until 33 BC when Octavian (the later Emperor Augustus) installed Roman hegemony in Dalmatia. Local instability and minor rebellions continued in the province of Dalmatia and culminated in the Great Illyrian Revolt in Dalmatia and closely linked Pannonia in 6 AD. The revolt, which lasted for three years, involved more than half a million combatants, auxiliaries and civilians on both side. In the aftermath, some Delmataean communities were relocated in the northern Sandzak region and others were resettled in parts of Carinthia to provide labor for the Roman mines. The defeat of the revolt began the integration of Dalmatia which in turn led to the romanization of the region by the early Middle Ages.