Sardegna - translation to English
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Sardegna - translation to English

AUTONOMOUS REGION OF ITALY
Sardigna; Sardegna; Sardic; Sardinia (Italy); Sardinia, Italy; Sardinia in the Middle Ages; Sardìgna; Sardìnnia; Sardhigna; Sardenya; Cerdeña; Culture of Sardinia; Architecture of Sardinia; Geography of Sardinia; Sports in Sardinia
  • Roman [[thermae]] of ''Forum Traiani'', in what is now [[Fordongianus]]
  • The French siege of Cagliari and Quartu
  • Teulada]]  2015 during NATO exercise Trident Juncture
  • A proportionate graph of Sardinian topography: 13.6% of the island is mountainous, 18.5% is flat, and 67.9% is hilly.
  • Albino donkeys in Asinara
  • Flag of the Kingdom of Sardinia (center) at the funeral of Charles I of Spain
  • -long}} railway tunnel of Campeda
  • Interior of San Pietro di Sorres, Borutta (SS)
  • Skilifts on the Bruncu Spina
  • Effect of Allied bombing on [[Cagliari]] during the [[Second World War]]
  • Arst]]) in Sassari
  • Cable-stayed bridge of the Monserrato University Campus interchange SS 554
  • [[Unipol Domus]] in [[Cagliari]]
  • [[Cala Goloritzé]], [[Baunei]]
  • Campidano near Cagliari
  • Carthage and its dependencies in 264 BC; a region of Sardinia was a part of Carthage.
  • Facade of Nostra Signora di Tergu (SS)
  • Cagliari, Alghero, Sassari, Nuoro, Oristano, Olbia
  • The Phoenician and subsequently Roman town of [[Tharros]]
  • A high-speed ferry in the Gulf of [[Olbia]]
  • Costume from [[Ovodda]]
  • traditional ethnic garments]], 1880s
  • 250px
  • Statue of the ''Juighissa'' [[Eleanor of Arborea]] in [[Oristano]]
  • Exports of Sardinia in 2012–13
  • One of the so-called [[Giants of Mont'e Prama]]
  • Economic classification of European regions according to [[Eurostat]]
  • Tourist railway between [[Aritzo]] and [[Belvì]]
  • ATR 365 owned by the Autonomous Region of Sardinia in Cagliari
  • The Sardinian feral cat, long considered a subspecies of the [[African wildcat]], are descended from domesticated cats.<ref>Spartaco Gippoliti & Giovanni Amori, "Ancient introductions of mammals in the Mediterranean Basin and their implications for conservation", ''Mammal Review'' 36 (1) (January 2006): 37–48.</ref>
  • Cheeses and sausages in [[Alghero]]'s city market
  • Giara horses
  • The Sardinian Judicates
  • View of [[Gennargentu]], the highest massif of Sardinia
  • Beer produced in Sardinia
  • G.M. Angioy entry into Sassari
  • Crypt of the Cagliari Cathedral
  • ''La madre dell'ucciso'' ("the mother of the killed") by Francesco Ciusa (1907)
  • ''[[Paeonia mascula]]''
  • thumb
  • Monte Corru Tundu Menhir in [[Villa Sant'Antonio]] (5.75 meters high)
  • The prehistoric megalithic temple of [[Monte d'Accoddi]]
  • Necropolis of Tuvixeddu]], Cagliari
  • Sardinian]] and Italian
  • Nora]]
  • [[Nuraghe Losa]]
  • Su Nuraxi, [[Barumini]]
  • A range of different cakes, pastries, meals, dishes and sweets which are common elements of Sardinian cuisine
  • Percentage distribution of employees in different economic sectors in Sardinia: 8.7% the primary sector (fishing, agriculture, farming), 23.5% the secondary sector (industry, machinery, manufacturing), and 67.8% the tertiary sector (tourism, services, finance)
  • Yachts in [[Porto Cervo]]. Luxury tourism has been an important source of income in Sardinia since the 1960s.
  • Petrochemical and Green Chemical industries in [[Porto Torres]]
  • Portrait of Grazia Deledda by [[Plinio Nomellini]], 1914
  • Santa Cristina holy well of [[Paulilatino]], tholos
  • A bilingual road sign in Italian and Sardinian at [[Pozzomaggiore]]
  • The proclamation of the Republic of [[Sassari]]. The Sassarese republic lasted from 1272 until 1323, when it sided with the new born Kingdom of Sardinia.
  • date=March 2021}}
  • [[Sardinia Radio Telescope]]
  • [[Giants' grave]] in [[Dorgali]] ([[Bronze Age]])
  • The medieval [[Basilica of San Gavino]] in [[Porto Torres]]
  • Archangel Michael]] by the [[Master of Castelsardo]]
  • Regatta at [[Santa Maria Navarrese]]
  • 250px
  • [[Lake Omodeo]], the largest reservoir in Sardinia and in Italy
  • Sardinia average rainfalls
  • Linguistic map of Sardinia
  • 250px
  • Sardinia
  • National and regional parks of Sardinia
  • [[Launeddas]] players
  • Lula]], [[Nuoro]]
  • Peeled trunks of [[cork oak]]s in [[Tempio Pausania]]
  • Super Yachts anchored at [[Porto Cervo]] port, [[Costa Smeralda]]
  • Spanish era coastal tower in [[Stintino]] called ''Torre della Pelosa''
  • Santo Stefano]]'s former NATO naval base
  • Main building of the [[University of Sassari]] (which started the university courses in 1562)
  • A Vandal-period coin found in Sardinia depicting Godas. Latin legend: REX CVDA.
  • left
  • Sassari]]

Sardegna         
n. Sardinia, semi-autonomous Italian island located in the Mediterranean Sea, 9 302 sq mi, separated in the north from Corsica by the Strait of Bonifacio
Sardinia      
n. (Geog) Sardegna
mouflon      
n. muflone, ruminante con caratteristiche simili alla pecora e che è tipico delle zone montagnose della Sardegna e della Corsica (zool.)

Definition

Malmsey
·noun A kind of sweet wine from Crete, the Canary Islands, ·etc.

Wikipedia

Sardinia

Sardinia ( sar-DIN-ee-ə; Italian: Sardegna [sarˈdeɲɲa]; Sardinian: Sardigna [saɾˈdiɲːa]) is the second-largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, and one of the 20 regions of Italy. It is located west of the Italian Peninsula, north of Tunisia and immediately south of the French island of Corsica.

It is one of the five Italian regions with some degree of domestic autonomy being granted by a special statute. Its official name, Autonomous Region of Sardinia, is bilingual in Italian and Sardinian: Regione Autonoma della Sardegna / Regione Autònoma de Sardigna. It is divided into four provinces and a metropolitan city. The capital of the region of Sardinia — and its largest city — is Cagliari.

Sardinia's indigenous language and Algherese Catalan are referred to by both the regional and national law as two of Italy's twelve officially recognized linguistic minorities, albeit gravely endangered, while the regional law provides some measures to recognize and protect the aforementioned as well as the island's other minority languages (the Corsican-influenced Sassarese and Gallurese, and finally Tabarchino Ligurian).

Owing to the variety of Sardinia's ecosystems, which include mountains, woods, plains, stretches of largely uninhabited territory, streams, rocky coasts, and long sandy beaches, Sardinia has been metaphorically described as a micro-continent. In the modern era, many travelers and writers have extolled the beauty of its long-untouched landscapes, which retain vestiges of the Nuragic civilization.

Examples of use of Sardegna
1. "Non è stato facile dire al presidente rossoblu Massimo Cellino che non avevo più stimoli per proseguire in questa attività che tanto mi ha dato", ha spiegato Zola in un incontro con la stampa, come riferito dal sito del club rossoblù. Nato in Sardegna ad Oliena nel 1'66, Zola era arrivato in serie A nel 1'8' col Napoli, entrando in nazionale con Arrigo Sacchi nel 1''1 e passando poi nel campionato 1''3–'4 al Parma, vincendo una Coppa Uefa.