Mussolini biography breve latte
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Sansepolcrismo
Interwar Italian political movement of Mussolini
Sansepolcrismo was the movement led by Benito Mussolini that preceded Fascism. The Sansepolcrismo takes its name from the rally organized by Mussolini at Piazza San Sepolcro in Milan on March 23, 1919, where he proclaimed the principles of Fasci Italiani di Combattimento, and then published them in Il Popolo d'Italia, on June 6, 1919, the newspaper he co-founded in November 1914 after leaving Avanti!
Origins
[edit]On March 2, 1919, Il Popolo d'Italia published a statement that included the program for a meeting for March 23, 1919.[1] Further mentions of the meeting were published on March 4 in Genoa by the Fascist War Veterans publications Italia Redenta ("Italy Redeemed") and Pensiero e Azione ("Thought and Action").[2] Word of the meeting was then spread among various veterans' associations spread throughout Italy.[1] The statement was reiterated later March 9 in
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Coffee, New Year knickers and lottery dreams: fem things to know about Italy
Italy, which goes to the polls on March 4, evokes some of the best known cliches. Here are fem quirky facts about the Italian people:
- Prendiamo un caffe? (Fancy a coffee?) -
The Italian coffee cult is now a worldwide phenomenon with its own vocabulary. But there are rules: only milk in the morning, a caffe latte, mjölkkaffe macchiato or any other milky struktur of kaffe (engelska), and never after a meal.
The other variants include ristretto (a short shot of concentrated espresso coffee), lungo (a larger and more diluted espresso), corretto (espresso shot with liquor), marocchino (with cocoa) and salentino (iced coffee with almond milk cubes).
And remember: Italians drink a lot of kaffe (engelska) but in small doses throughout the day. No magnum sized coffee cups please!!
- Mickey, Donald and Benito -
To the horror of purists, Italians are increasingly peppering their conversation with Anglicisms but this was not the case
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TheJakartaPost
taly, which goes to the polls on March 4, evokes some of the best known cliches. Here are five quirky facts about the Italian people:
- Prendiamo un caffe? (Fancy a coffee?) -
The Italian coffee cult is now a worldwide phenomenon with its own vocabulary. But there are rules: only milk in the morning, a caffe latte, latte macchiato or any other milky form of coffee, and never after a meal.
The other variants include ristretto (a short shot of concentrated espresso coffee), lungo (a larger and more diluted espresso), corretto (espresso shot with liquor), marocchino (with cocoa) and salentino (iced coffee with almond milk cubes).
And remember: Italians drink a lot of coffee but in small doses throughout the day. No magnum sized coffee cups please!!
- Mickey, Donald and Benito -
To the horror of purists, Italians are increasingly peppering their conversation with Anglicisms but this was not the case earlier.
During Fascist rule, Benito Mussolini banne