Quick Take Off in Italian

Quick Take Off in Italian

Author: Francesca Logi

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780198606581

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ideal for last minute language learning, Quick Take Off In Italian enables the absolute beginner or the refresher learner to speak and understand Italian fast, containing all the essential vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation guidance needed to communicate. With 150 minutes of audio on 2 CDs or 2 cassettes and an easy-to-follow book, the course covers 6 different subject areas through a variety of quick and simple speaking and listening activities. It includes a quick-reference section where you can dip in and out of your preferred topics, offers tipson Italian culture, a handy ready-reckoner, and test-yourself assessments.A credit card-sized phrase-reminder gives you emergency vocabulary at your fingertips, and the light, transparent travel pack means that it's perfect for people on the move: if you're heading off on business or pleasure, you can get to grips with the language on the way to your destination andcommunicate with confidence from the word go.


Oxford Take Off in Italian

Oxford Take Off in Italian

Author: Concetta Batelli-Kneale

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2001-01-01

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 9780198603092

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Oxford Take Off In Italian is designed specifically to meet the needs of beginner speakers learning Italian on their own. It offers a comprehensive Italian language course for anyone from the absolute beginner to the student who wants to brush up. This course book is also available as a pack with audio content on CD (0198603088), or on cassette (019860307x).


Rome's Italian Wars

Rome's Italian Wars

Author: Livy,

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2013-04-04

Total Pages: 449

ISBN-13: 019956485X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

"Here is a superb new translation of Books 6 to 10 of Livy's monumental history of Rome, covering the period when Rome, in a series of ever greater wars, imposed mastery over virtually the entire Italian peninsula. Livy paints vivid portraits of all the notable figures, such as young Manlius Torquatus, victor in a David-versus-Goliath duel with a Gallic chieftain, and Appius Claudius who built Rome's first major highway, the Appian Way. Livy's blend of factual narrative and imaginative recreation brings to life a key moment in the rise of Rome, and the one complete account we have, as the city passes from the mists of legend into the light of history. J. C. Yardley's translation gives a vivid sense of the energy, variety, and literary skill of Livy's great work. Dexter Hoyos's Introduction sets Livy in the context of Roman historiography and deftly explains why this period was so critical an era for the rise of Rome. The most up-to-date edition, drawing on the latest scholarship, this major work of Roman literature and history includes comprehensive notes that clarify problems of historical content, topography, and chronology, a detailed glossary of Roman technical terms, an appendix on the Roman legion of the time, and two maps."--Publisher's website.


The Oxford Companion to Italian Food

The Oxford Companion to Italian Food

Author: Gillian Riley

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2007-11-01

Total Pages: 672

ISBN-13: 0191567000

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Here is an inspiring, wide-ranging A-Z guide to one of the world's best-loved cuisines. Designed for cooks and consumers alike, The Oxford Companion to Italian Food covers all aspects of the history and culture of Italian gastronomy, from dishes, ingredients, and delicacies to cooking methods and implements, regional specialties, the universal appeal of Italian cuisine, influences from outside Italy, and much more. Following in the footsteps of princes and popes, vagabond artists and cunning peasants, austere scholars and generations of unknown, unremembered women who shaped pasta, moulded cheeses and lovingly tended their cooking pots, Gillian Riley celebrates a heritage of amazing richness and delight. She brings equal measures of enthusiasm and expertise to her writing, and her entries read like mini-essays, laced with wit and gastronomical erudition, marked throughout by descriptive brilliance, and entirely free of the pompous tone that afflicts so much writing about food. The Companion is attentive to both tradition and innovation in Italian cooking, and covers an extraordinary range of information, from Anonimo Toscano, a medieval cookbook, to Bartolomeo Bimbi, a Florentine painter commissioned by Cosimo de Medici to paint portraits of vegetables, to Paglierina di Rifreddo, a young cheese made of unskimmed cows' milk, to zuppa inglese, a dessert invented by 19th century Neapolitan pastry chefs. Major topics receive extended treatment. The entry for Parmesan, for example, runs to more than 2,000 words and includes information on its remarkable nutritional value, the region where it is produced, the breed of cow used to produce it (the razza reggiana, or vacche rosse), the role of the cheese maker, the origin of its name, Molière's deathbed demand for it, its frequent and lustrous depiction in 16th and 17th century paintings, and the proper method of serving, where Riley admonishes: "One disdains the phallic peppermill, but must always appreciate the attentive grating, at the table, of parmesan over pasta or soup, as magical in its way as shavings of truffles." Such is the scope and flavor of The Oxford Companion to Italian Food. For anyone with a hunger to learn more about the history, culture and variety of Italian cuisine, The Oxford Companion to Italian Food offers endless satisfactions.


The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature

The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature

Author: Peter Hainsworth

Publisher: Oxford University Press on Demand

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 644

ISBN-13: 9780198183327

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Embracing the whole of Italian literature, from the early thirteenth century to the present, The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature takes a broad view of what constitutes literature, covering historical writing, travel writing, theatre, and philosophy as well as the novel, poetry, literary dialogues, and critical theory. Providing generous coverage of canonical figures - from Dante and Petrarch to Montale and Calvino - it also contains a wealth of short entries on significant minor figures. The Companion also explores Latin literature written by Italian authors - a major feature of Renaissance culture - and Italian dialect literature; and highlights articles which place the writers and their works in their wider social, historical, artistic, and political context. The 2,400 alphabetically-arranged entries provide clear, up-to-date coverage of Italian literature, making this an essential reference for specialists and non-specialists alike. Written by expert contributors, the entries reflect the current state of international scholarship, which has developed in many different and exciting directions in recent years.