Italian$41170$ - tradução para espanhol
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Italian$41170$ - tradução para espanhol

SCOTTISH PEOPLE OF ITALIAN DESCENT
Scots Italian; Scots-Italian; Italian-Scots; Italian Scot; Scottish-Italians; Scottish-Italian; Scottish Italian; Italian Scottish

Italian      
n. italiano, nativo de Italia
Italian restaurant         
  • DOC]] labels on two bottles of [[Italian wine]]
  • Various types of [[pasta]]
  • Traditional Piedmontese ''[[agnolotti]]''
  • antipasto}}
  • A classic Italian ''[[aperitivo]]''
  • On the Subject of Cooking}}), 1709 edition.
  • ''[[Arancini]]''
  • The Art of Well Cooking}}) published by Bartolomeo Stefani in 1662
  • A [[Chicken parmigiana]], based on a combination of the Italian ''[[parmigiana di melanzane]]'' with a ''[[cotoletta]]''. It is widespread in [[North America]] and [[Australia]].
  • ''[[Pesto]]'', a [[Liguria]]n sauce made out of basil, olive oil, hard cheese and pine nuts, and which can be eaten with pasta or other dishes such as soup
  • Bucatini}} with [[Amatriciana sauce]], which features the New World food of tomatoes
  •  page=198}}</ref>
  • carasau]]'' bread
  • Bottles of ''[[limoncello]]''
  • Maiale Ubriaco - Pork Braised in Chianti with Tuscan Kale
  • ''[[Cotoletta]]''
  • A ''[[pizzeria]]'' in [[Rosebank, Gauteng]], [[South Africa]]
  • alla carbonara]]''
  • fiasco]]''
  • ''[[Finocchiona]]'', a classic Tuscan Salami
  • ''[[Fontina]]'' cheese from Valle d'Aosta
  • A restored medieval kitchen inside [[Verrucole Castle]], Tuscany.
  • ''[[Frico]]'', a traditional dish in the [[Friuli-Venezia Giulia]] region
  • [[Saffron]] has been used in Italy for centuries.
  • Billboard in front of a grocery store announcing "Gnocchi del 29" in the [[Soriano Department]], [[Uruguay]]
  • ''[[Espresso]]''
  • Baked ''[[lasagne]]'' with ''[[ragù]]''
  • cornetto]]''
  • ''[[Milanesa]] a la napolitana'' with [[French fries]], an Italian-inspired dish based on the original ''[[cotoletta]]'' dish from [[Milan]], common in [[South America]]
  • A varietal [[Sagrantino]] indigenous to the region of Umbria
  • ''[[Mozzarella]] di bufala'' is a dairy product traditionally made from buffalo milk in southern Italy.
  • ''[['Nduja]]'' with bread, with a piece of 'Nduja sausage in the background
  • ''[[Olive ascolane]]''
  • [[Olive oil]]
  • cime di rapa]]'' sauce
  • ''[[Ossobuco]]'' served with ''[[risotto alla milanese]]''
  • ''[[Parmigiano-Reggiano]]'' cheese
  • ''[[Parmigiana di melanzane]]''
  • ''[[Pasta alla Norma]]'' is amongst Sicily's most historic and iconic dishes.
  • ''[[Pasta con i peperoni cruschi]]'', a traditional dish from Basilicata
  • ''[[Piadina]]''
  • ''[[Polenta]]'' with ''[[bagna càuda]]''
  • ''[[Polenta]]'' served with ''[[sopressa]]'' and mushrooms, a traditional [[peasant food]] of Veneto
  • figatellu}}
  • ''[[Focaccia]]'' with rosemary. Focaccia is widely associated with Ligurian cuisine
  • [[Italian wine]] and ''[[salumi]]''
  • language=it}}</ref>
  • [[Bartolomeo Scappi]], personal chef to [[Pope Pius V]]
  • alpine]] regional and [[Austria]]n influence.
  • An Italian-American pizza with pepperoni (salami), mushrooms, olives and peppers
  • ''[[Tagliatelle]]'' with ''[[ragù]]''
  • page=x}}</ref>
  • torta frita}}, which derives from Italian ''[[gnocco fritto]]''
  • url-status=dead}}</ref>
  • Grilled swordfish
  • Waiter pouring [[Prosecco]]
  • ''[[Zeppole]]''
CULINARY TRADITIONS OF ITALY
Italian food; Cuisine of Italy; Cuisine of Tuscany; Italian cusine; Italalian cuisine; Cusine of Italy; Tuscan cooking; Tuscan cuisine; Italian liqueur; Italian Cuisine; Italian restaurant; Drinking in Italy; Northern Italian cuisine; Fette biscottate; Gastronomy of Italy; Italian cooking; Regional cuisines of Italy; History of Italian cuisine; Ristorante; Italian rice; Medieval Italian cuisine
restaurante italiano
Italian American         
  • One of the largest mass [[lynching]]s in American history involved eleven Italian immigrants in [[New Orleans]] in 1891.
  • Columbus Day in [[Salem, Massachusetts]] in 1892
  • 1973 U.S. postage stamp featuring [[Amadeo Giannini]]
  • America]]" is derived<ref>[https://www.livescience.com/42510-amerigo-vespucci.html Szalay, Jessie. ''Amerigo Vespuggi: Facts, Biography & Naming of America'' (citing Erika Cosme of Mariners Museum & Park, Newport News VA). 20 September 2017 (accessed 23 June 2019)]</ref>
  • Historical advertisement of an Italian American restaurant, between circa 1930 and 1945
  • St. Anthony of Padua Church]] in New York was established in 1859 as the first parish in the United States formed specifically to serve the Italian immigrant community.
  • Boston's North End]]
  • Distinguished Service Medal]] from General [[George C. Marshall]], 1945
  • ancestry]] form a plurality.
  • new era]] in the history of humankind and sustained contact between the two worlds.
  • access-date=October 30, 2009}}</ref>
  • [[Danielle Trussoni]]
  • [[Philip Mazzei]], Italian physician and promoter of liberty, whose phrase: "All men are by nature equally free and independent" was incorporated into the [[United States Declaration of Independence]]
  • A war-time poster
  • [[Don DeLillo]]
  • An Italian immigrant making an [[American breakfast]] aided by instructional materials from the [[YMCA]]
  • url-status=dead}}</ref> was awarded the 1938 [[Nobel Prize in Physics]] for his work on [[induced radioactivity]].
  • Feast of the Assumption]] in Cleveland's Little Italy
  • [[Mother Cabrini]]
  • Statue of [[Francis Vigo]]
  • [[Frank Sinatra]] and [[Dean Martin]] in 1963
  • [[Fiorello La Guardia]] with Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938
  • The [[Garibaldi-Meucci Museum]] on Staten Island
  • Little Italy in Chicago, 1909
  • Italian immigrants entering the United States via [[Ellis Island]] in 1905
  • The [[Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire]] in 1911. The victims were almost exclusively Jewish and Italian female immigrants.
  • Italian-American veterans of all wars memorial, Southbridge, Massachusetts
  • frameless
  • A fourteen year old Italian girl working at a paper-box factory (1913)
  • [[Joe DiMaggio]], considered one of the greatest baseball players of all time, in 1951
  • [[Joe Petrosino]] in 1909
  • [[Lawrence Ferlinghetti]]
  • San Diego's Little Italy]]
  • Italy]] won the [[2006 FIFA World Cup]]
  • Italian Cultural and Community Center ([[Logue House]]) in the [[Houston Museum District]]
  • St. Lucy's Church in Newark
  • Review of the [[Garibaldi Guard]] by President [[Abraham Lincoln]]
  • access-date=April 9, 2017}}</ref> in 1991. He moved to the United States in 1955 with his family during the [[Istrian-Dalmatian exodus]]
  • [[Michael Valente]], recipient of the highest military decoration, the [[Medal of Honor]], for his actions during [[World War I]]
  • date=December 2022}} the official death toll stood at 362, 171 of them Italian migrants.
  • Lower East Side]], circa 1900.
  • Northside in Syracuse
  • Old Neighborhood Italian American Club, [[Las Vegas]]
  • [[Paola Corso]]
  • Italian Market]].
  • [[Enrico Fermi]] between [[Franco Rasetti]] (left) and [[Emilio Segrè]] in [[academic dress]]
  • Sts. Peter and Paul Church]] in North Beach, San Francisco
  • [[Emilio Segrè]], who was awarded the [[Nobel Prize in Physics]] in 1959, was among the Italian Jews who emigrated to the United States after Mussolini's regime implemented an anti-semitic legislation.
  • The "Bambinos" of Little Italy - Syracuse, New York in 1899
  • Nick Nuccio Parkway]]
  • [[Rudolph Valentino]] with [[Alice Terry]] in ''The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse'', 1921
  • [[Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge]] in New York City is named for Giovanni da Verrazzano.
  • Feast of San Gennaro]] in New York
  • Verrazzano]]'s voyage of 1524. The Italian explorer was the first documented European to enter New York Harbor and the Hudson River.
  • Apollo]] programs
ETHNIC GROUP; AMERICANS OF ITALIAN ANCESTRY
List of famous Italian-Americans; Italian-Americans; Italian in the United States; Italian-American; Italians in the United States; List of U.S. cities with large Italian American populations; Stereotypes of Italian Americans; Italian American; Italoamericani; Italo-americani; Italo-Americani; Italo-Americans; Italo-American; Discrimination against Italian Americans; Political views of Italian Americans; Italian–American; History of Italian Americans; Demographics of Italian Americans; Italian immigrants in the United States; Italian immigration to the United States; Italian immigration to America; Italian Americans in Los Angeles; Italian Americans in politics
(n.) = italoamericano
Ex: The city is home today to a colorful mix of Italian Americans and yuppies.

Definição

Italianized

Wikipédia

Italian Scots

Italian Scots are people of Italian descent living in Scotland. These terms may refer to people who are born in Scotland and of Italian descent. It can also refer to people of mixed Scottish and Italian ancestry. A recent Italian voter census estimated that there are 70,000 to 100,000 people in Scotland of Italian descent or Italian nationals, which is up to 1.9% of the overall Scottish population.

Latest available figures from the 2011 UK Census show there were 6,048 people born in Italy living in Scotland. This was up from 4,936 in 2001 and 3,947 recorded in 1991. In 2016, Ronnie Convery, secretary of the Italian Scotland charitable organisation and director of communications at the Archdiocese of Glasgow, asserted that a completely new dimension was being added to the Scots-Italians community. He said, “There has been a brand new migration over the past two years, and the biggest one we have seen in 100 years."

Migration to Scotland from Italy has been predominantly from the provinces of Lucca and Frosinone. Additional provinces with fairly significant emigration to Scotland include Isernia, La Spezia, Pistoia, Parma, Latina, Massa-Carrara and Pordenone. The Scottish Italian community settled mostly in the Glasgow area, most of whom are of Tuscan origin. The smaller Italian community in and around Edinburgh is predominantly of Lazian origin.