1.
signed copy was in Italian, but his was translated into English
2.
As my eyes adapted to the shadows I could make out Italian mob hair as well
3.
They don't give a dime if I know perfect English and Italian, as well as very good German and Spanish
4.
‘I was over in the Italian peninsular last winter … you were there with the Farmers’ Guild delegates
5.
He had Italian marble imported from Rome for columns
6.
Some forty paintings were shown on the first list, along with a good dozen sculptures … she recognised some of the names of the artists … how had he got hold of a Rembrandt? Could it be original? The second list was longer, more varied and definitely more curious – intaglio tables from the Italian peninsula rubbed shoulders with tribal masks from the African continent and animal skins from places as far afield as Asia
7.
all done in Italian marble
8.
This house is going to smell like an Italian restaurant shortly
9.
I met up with a young Italian, Agna’s older brother
10.
On his head, a gentleman's Italian 'Borsalino' hat with the brim curled over one eye
11.
‘Rob, what do you think about this Italian job?’
12.
My Italian is a little rusty but I think it will come back as I use it, but more importantly, you won’t have any trouble making yourself understood
13.
Occasionally, when she was preoccupied, she’d turn round and say something to me in Italian and then laugh at herself for being a fool
14.
The meal had been pleasant … we discovered a mutual liking for Italian food, amongst other things
15.
It doesn't sound very tiring sitting reading through documents on the screen, but after ploughing through Bunty's early years followed by the Italian section, I’m starting to feel as though I’ve done a day’s work
16.
I can pad that out to make it a reasonable length, then there’s the Italian years, a section on her life when she came back to look after her parents, the conversion of the house and setting up of the Foundation and the last section would be the last thirty years … I could even do a concluding section about the impact Danvers House has had on various women since it was set up
17.
‘My father is Italian
18.
I had never seen Bunty so animated, she chattered away to him in Italian and, as he told me later, was extremely knowledgeable about the city and life there
19.
Apparently, she was originally of Italian extraction, although her
20.
Santangilo’s, a high class Italian restaurant
21.
sightedness of the Italian Cardinals
22.
'You will not deprive the Italian States of a
23.
Italian Cardinals are somehow different to that of the Pope?
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another Italian Cardinal and appoint a Frenchman in his
25.
to be part of this delegation – the token Italian that gave
26.
was alarmed to find himself standing next to the Italian
27.
gape mutely at the obnoxious Italian
28.
'He's Italian and she's a woman - what do you think
29.
responded to the Italian Cardinal’s earlier comment;
30.
how sensitive the Italian Cardinal was to such taunts
31.
Jean suddenly realised that the Italian was actually sharing
32.
resent this ill-disciplined Italian whose temper threatened
33.
'Sit down,' said Corrente to the Italian Cardinal
34.
'Oh, come on! The tension between the Italian and
35.
point of view would be if one of the hated Italian Cardinals
36.
'One of the Cardinals - the Italian - stopped the
37.
'No motive? That slimy Italian assaulted his wife,
38.
The real meal was all the homemade Italian stuff—
39.
He was Italian
40.
“He only lived in an Italian
41.
‘Is he the Italian? Yes, I knew him
42.
hostility and conflict between the French and Italian
43.
We saw spectacular show at the MGM Grand and had a fantastic Italian dinner before he left for Arizona to help his sister moved to Phoenix
44.
Italian drivers are terrible!’ he said
45.
Later, we joined the townspeople in that most Italian of
46.
‘Pick a bottle,’ he said (in Italian – I suppose that
47.
than the better-known Italian Lakes
48.
In the main square of Gouda is an Italian restaurant
49.
Ramuzzini, an eminent Italian physician, has written a particular book concerning such diseases
50.
But whether it was advantageous to plant a new vineyard, was a matter of dispute among the ancient Italian husbandmen, as we learn from Columella
51.
Nathaniel’s limited knowledge of Latin was based more on street Italian than the classics but as far as he could work out this meant something like, Dark Lord take us now
52.
to al ow the passing of Italian troops
53.
that the Italian city could have a connection with
54.
role during the Italian Renaissance, but I don't
55.
So if your niche was Italian cooking then you would
56.
(And if your niche was Italian Cooking you would type in:
57.
If you except Venice, for of that city the history is somewhat different, it is the history of all the considerable Italian republics, of which so great a number arose and perished between the end of the twelfth and the beginning of the sixteenth century
58.
The crusades, too, though, by the great waste of stock and destruction of inhabitants which they occasioned, they must necessarily have retarded the progress of the greater part of Europe, were extremely favourable to that of some Italian cities
59.
Though posterior in their establishment, yet all the arts of refinement, philosophy, poetry, and eloquence, seem to have been cultivated as early, and to have been improved as highly in them as in any part of the mother country The schools of the two oldest Greek philosophers, those of Thales and Pythagoras, were established, it is remarkable, not in ancient Greece, but the one in an Asiatic, the other in an Italian colony
60.
Scotch-Irish farmers and tradesmen pioneered the area followed by Italian and Slav’s who worked in the mines and coke ovens
61.
Some of the little Italian states which are situated upon the Po, and the rivers which run into it, derive some revenue from duties of this kind, which are paid altogether by foreigners, and which, perhaps, are the only duties that one state can impose upon the subjects of another, without obstruction in any respect, the industry or commerce of its own
62.
The Italian republics, the United Provinces of the Netherlands, are all in debt
63.
The Italian republics seem to have begun it
64.
Spain seems to have learned the practice from the Italian republics, and (its taxes being probably less judicious than theirs) it has, in proportion to its natural strength, been-still more enfeebled
65.
In the 1920"s, while serving time in an Italian prison, this Italian philosopher and communist advised his colleagues and acolytes that a frontal assault against democracy and capitalism would fail
66.
“My parents were Italian, Roman in fact, very strict Catholics
67.
It was a black and white panoramic shot showing the remains of the Italian capital city
68.
Nathan was waiting in a famous Italian coffee shop in another part of London
69.
She told the cabby the name of an Italian sounding place and we were off on our little adventure for the evening
70.
“Well, I suppose Portelli could be Italian, but Paul Portelli is definitely a Maltese name, and your features are very Maltese
71.
The Russians, started to hold off the Germans and their Italian allies, and inflicting heavy losses
72.
Cosmo came from a small Italian hill town
73.
For a moment, William thought of this kill as revenge for his Italian friend’s sheep
74.
“This is really good! Hey you guys, want a taste?” William turned to his friends, who seemed to be shocked that he had actually accepted food from some weird Italian kid who was the biggest loner in school
75.
When Italian fascists used aerial bombing and nerve gas against Ethiopian civilians, Roosevelt again spoke out against the offenders in thunderous tones
76.
For instance a recent failed attempt in Nigeria to rescue a British and Italian citizen caused a diplomatic breach between the UK and Italy since Italy was not informed before the failed rescue took place
77.
We refer to it as mob or Italian style
78.
Also known as Italian or Mob style kidnapping! Note this may be different in the North (see terrorism below)
79.
Such (casual) indifference to this important (historical) event reminded me of a remark made by the Italian dictator, Benito Mussolini, and I quote, ―Give the people sports‖; (the soccer matches ostensibly intended to provide cover for his considerable misdeeds)
80.
Chilean secret police hired Croatian and Italian fascists and the Shah of Iran's secret police to kill targets for them
81.
It would be an early supper and Beth knew exactly where: an Italian restaurant she had found with mouth-watering odors that poured from the door, such as she hadn’t experienced in excess of a year
82.
A delicious smell hit me when the driver opened the door, and I discovered that he’d gone by an Italian restaurant for carryout during my appointment
83.
Oh, yeah, a junior deputy assistant under-minister in the Italian Foreign Office
84.
The Italian glass factories had returned to almost 75% of their previous production capacity, and for cash, whatever you wanted was available
85.
Gaetano had given Ferguson the name of a contact in Milan whom Gaetano had said would give 750 Italian Lire per barrel
86.
His ability to speak Italian would be useful once they reached Milan
87.
Communist partisans still controlled the northern mountains, and it was only because of the guerrillas’ connections with the Italian railway labor unions that rail travel moved relatively unscathed
88.
Motor vehicle traffic in the Italian Alpine was non-existent
89.
Colling drew the second round of riding with the trucks, and he had become stiff with cold when he saw with relief that they were drawing into a station close to the Italian border
90.
The Beretta I liked was the most expensive of the Italian guns - $675
91.
Major Pritchard pulled a thick roll of Italian currency from inside his jacket and counted out thirty new 10,000 Lire banknotes and handed them to Gambelli
92.
When the Italian appeared, walking beside Gambelli, he was talking and gesturing excitedly
93.
Speaking formally to impress the Italian, Colling lamented, “I so regret that we will have to take this good German beer that we have brought all the way to Italy to the second buyer that was recommended to us
94.
The Italian asked Colling to reconsider, and after a few minutes of bargaining back and forth, the Italian offered 600 Lire per barrel
95.
Again, however, as Colling turned away, the Italian called him back
96.
The Sergeant returned with a large wad of Italian banknotes in his hand, which he and Colling re-counted
97.
He saw stacks of crates with stenciled labeling that he assumed to be Italian wines, cardboard boxes marked Schenley’s and Old Granddad, and other containers that he recognized as brands of Scotch, Irish and Canadian whiskies
98.
The Italian noticed Colling’s interest in his inventory, and came and stood beside him, “Very nice, yes?” Caltineri asked
99.
Sergeant Gambelli had observed the loading of the Italian liqueur, and asked Colling as he was pad-locking the doors of the Henschel, “What you up to, Colling?”
100.
As the Italian checked them off against his order sheets, the Americans, with the help of two laborers that the manager had called, passed the windows into the trucks