How to use in-sentence of “dalmatian”:
+ Italy and the Dalmatian Italians.
+ Facing financial ruin from lack of sales, Cruella sets an evil plan in motion – to reprogram her toys to capture any Dalmatian puppies in sight.
+ In 1885 a group of young Dalmatian Italians created a sort of secret pact which pledged to fight on a united front against the government of Vienna.
+ Devoted to dogs and good causes, she is delighted that Chloe, her parole officer, has a dalmatian family and connections with a dog charity.
+ At the end of that month almost all of the Dalmatian coast, with the major cities of Spalato, Sebenico and Cattaro were annexed to Italy with the name Governatorate of Dalmatia.

Example sentences of “dalmatian”:
+ But other incidents and demonstrations against Italy and the Dalmatian Italians happened in other cities, like Trau and the "Castelli".
+ The most renowned Dalmatian Italian in those years was Antonio Bajamonti, the last Italian mayor of Spalato.
+ In 1918–1920, a series of incidents took place at Spalato between Dalmatian Italians and local South Slavs fighting -with ethnic disturbances, revolts and bloody clashes- for the control of the city.
+ But other incidents and demonstrations against Italy and the Dalmatian Italians happened in other cities, like Trau and the “Castelli”.
+ The most renowned Dalmatian Italian in those years was Antonio Bajamonti, the last Italian mayor of Spalato.
+ In 1918–1920, a series of incidents took place at Spalato between Dalmatian Italians and local South Slavs fighting -with ethnic disturbances, revolts and bloody clashes- for the control of the city.
+ But not all of Dalmatia was annexed by Italy, as the German puppet state – the Independent State of Croatia – took some sections of the Dalmatian areas, though the Italian army held control over all of Dalmatia.
+ Each of the two political factions had support within the Dalmatian city states, based mostly on economic reasons.
+ On the lintel of this old doorway is carved a bear, the heraldic emblem of the great house of Orsini – carved, no doubt, by George’s own hand, over this door through which he must have passed so often.” Giorgio’s and Elizabetta’s daughter Flavia married another Dalmatian painter, Giorgio Culinovich in the year of 1463.
+ By the 15th century, the word “Herzegovina” would be introduced, marking the shrink of the borders of Dalmatia to the narrow littoral area where was spoken the Dalmatian language.
+ Politically, the neolatin Dalmatian city-states were often isolated and compelled to either fall back on the Venetian Republic for support, or tried to make it on their own.
+ In September 1941, Italy’s fascist dictator, Benito Mussolini, ordered the military occupation of the entire Dalmatian coast and islands that belonged to fascist Croatia of Ante Pavelić: he tried to annex those areas to the Governorship of Dalmatia, but was temporarily stopped by the strong opposition of Pavelić, who retained nominal control of those areas.
+ The number of Dalmatian Italians in that country has fallen to 300, and the Italian Union concentrates on the Istrian region, including the city of Fiume, which is home to the vast majority of the Croatian Italian national minority numbering around 30,000 citizens.
+ Most of the population of the newly created province was CroatsCroatian, but there was even a small -but historical- community of nearly 3,000 Dalmatian Italians only in Spalato city they were more than 1,000 in 1940, even if greatly reduced from the first half of the XIX century when they were more than one third of the city’s population Guerrino Perselli.
+ According to the Dalmatian historian Luigi Paulucci.
+ After WWII nearly all the 25.000 remaining Dalmatian Italians of Zara and the Italian “Governatorato di Dalmazia” were forced to leave Dalmatia during the Istrian-Dalmatian exodus.
+ The Dalmatian pelican is a large bird.
+ The geographical position of the Dalmatian city states suffices to explain the relatively small influence exercised by Byzantine culture throughout the six centuries during which Dalmatia was part of the Eastern empire.
+ This is a list of Italian language place names on the Dalmatian coast, including the islands up to Rijeka/Fiume.
+ The Governatorate was divided between the three provinces of Zara, Spalato and Cattaro, and many families of Dalmatian italians who were forced to move to Italy after World War I were relocated in these provinces.
+ Some Dalmatian Italians, mostly living in Zara, entered in the Italian government after WWI and promoted the conquest of coastal Dalmatia by Italian troops in 1941.
+ After the Austrian defeat, in the first half of November 1918 Italian troops occupied the Dalmatian territories assigned to Italy by the 1915 Pact of London.
More in-sentence examples of “dalmatian”:
+ Venice started to take control of the small southern Dalmatian villages around the 10th century, assimilating quickly the neolatin “Dalmatian language” of the coastal areas into the Venetian language.
+ We know about the dalmatian dialect of Ragusa from two letters, from 1325 and 1397, and other medieval texts, which show a language influenced heavily by Venetian.
+ Some think the Dalmatian is from Croatia, and is a Croatian breed.
+ The population was mostly Slav, but there were nearly 3,000 autochthonous Italians, descendants from the Dalmatian Italians since Roman times: they were concentrated in the areas of Cattaro and Perasto.
+ The most popular periodical for Dalmatian Italians is “Il Dalmata”, published in Trieste by Renzo de’ Vidovich.
+ This created a strong emigration: in Dalmatia the Dalmatian Italians were 25% in 1815, but a century later in 1915 they were only 2%.
+ The Mongols attacked the Dalmatian cities for the next few years but eventually withdrew.
+ They are the second largest birds in the pelican family, with only the Dalmatian pelican larger than them.
+ Unlike in the earlier versions of the story, the dalmatians are played by real dalmatian actors, and none of the dalmatians talk.
+ Italian General Vittorio Ambrosio conquered in a few days all the Dalmatian coast of Yugoslavia, and occupied the area around Cattaro in April 1941.
+ The linguist Matteo Bartoli calculated that the Italians were 33% of the Dalmatian population during the Napoleonic wars, while currently there are only 300 Italians in Croatian Dalmatia and 500 Italians in coastal Montenegro.
+ The Dalmatian language is an extinct Romance languagesRomance language that was spoken along the eastern Adriatic in the Dalmatian coast from Fiume in Montenegro.
+ Italian General Vittorio Ambrosio conquered in a few days all the Dalmatian coast of Yugoslavia, and occupied in April 1941 the area of southern Dalmatia around Spalato.
+ Pavelić’s “Independent State of Croatia” comprised territory of Croatia, Srem, and Bosnia-Herzegovina – except parts of the Dalmatian coast and islands, which were ceded to the Italians.
+ Venice deeply influenced the Venetian, Istrian and Dalmatian coasts for one thousand years.
+ The 1816 Austro-Hungarian census registered 66,000 Italian speaking people between the 301,000 inhabitants of Dalmatia, or 22% of the total dalmatian population.
+ After WWII Italy lost all the territories in Dalmatia, and more than 22000 Dalmatian Italians exiled mainly in Italy.
+ The Dalmatian cities started accepting foreign sovereignty but eventually they reverted to their previous desire for independence.
+ The northern dalmatian islands of Krk and Rab were not added to the Governorship of Dalmatia, but were added to the Italian “Province of Fiume”.
+ The cultural influence from Italy is clearly evident in the urbanization plans of the main Dalmatian cities in the XIX/XX centuries.
+ Many of these troops served abroad; at the Battle of Lepanto, for example, in 1571, a Dalmatian squadron assisted the allied fleets of Spain, Venice, Austria and the Papal States to crush the Turkish navy.
+ In earliest times, the land now known as Croatia was inhabited by seafaring pirates known to the Romans as the Dalmatian Tribes, until the Romans formally conquered and annexed the territory in 9AD, calling it the province of “Dalmatia” named after these tribes.
+ The number of Dalmatian Serbs remained between “20%” and “25%” by the end of Venetian rule, while the venetian speaking population in the Dalmatian cities and islands increased with colonists from north-east Italy.
+ In these centuries, the Venetian language became the “lingua franca” of all Dalmatia, assimilating the Dalmatian language of the Romanised Illyrians and influencing partially the coastal Croatian language and the Albanian language.
+ Venice started to take control of the small southern Dalmatian villages around the 10th century, assimilating quickly the neolatin "Dalmatian language" of the coastal areas into the Venetian language.
+ We know about the dalmatian dialect of Ragusa from two letters, from 1325 and 1397, and other medieval texts, which show a language influenced heavily by Venetian.
+ The Dalmatian is a medium, strong dog.
+ In the city of Spalato there was an Dalmatian Italiansautochthonous Italian community, which was reorganized in November 1918 through the foundation of the “National Fasces” not to be confused with “Autonomist Party”, dissolved by the Austrian authorities in 1915.
+ And in the same year, six Dalmatian Italians also fought for the “Roman Republic”.
+ In the battle of Curtatone, as a first lieutenant of the Battalion ‘Bande Nere’, fought against the Austrians the Dalmatian Giurovich Marino: he was killed by the Austrian soldiers in Livorno as a promoter of the ideals of Giuseppe Mazzini.
+ In the peace treaty the territory of Zara and some Dalmatian islands were united to the Kingdom of Italy.
+ But after the attack of January 27, 1920 in which were damaged nearly all the Italian-owned shops and the offices of Italian institutions, some Italian sailors of the “Puglia” now under the command of captain Tommaso Gulli, started to defend themselves and the Dalmatian Italians menacing to use their guns.
+ After autumn 1941 also the Dalmatian islands of Pago and Lesina, initially given to the croatian dictator Ante Pavelic, were annexed.
+ He won and became free, and in some versions of the story he also got power over the Dalmatian cities.
+ With the Battle of Lissa battle of Lissa, part of Third Italian War of Independence, in 1866 began a period of open hostility against the Dalmatian Italians by the Austrians, who favored the Croatian part because on their side.
+ Indeed the Dalmatian Italians were a fundamental presence in Dalmatia, when the process of political unification of the Italians, Croats and Serbs started at the beginning of the 19th century.
+ The story is about Cruella de Vil and her plans to skin 101 Dalmatian puppies to make a fur coat.
+ The Dalmatian stands.
+ It has increased to influence totally the dalmatian culture during the times of the Republic of Venice and the Italian Renaissance.
+ While the Governorship was not officially a region of Italy, the northern Dalmatian islands of Krk were administratively united to the Italian province of Fiume and became areas of the Kingdom of Italy.
+ He was from an old Dalmatian family with roots in the original Dalmatian ItaliansDalmatian neolatin people of southern Illyria.
+ An internal struggle of Hungary, between King Sigismund and the Neapolitan house of Anjou, also reflected on Dalmatia: in the early 15th century, all Dalmatian cities welcomed the Neapolitan fleet except for Dubrovnik.
+ We have the page Dalmatian Italians.
+ They also show clearly that the Dalmatian levies far surpassed the Italian mercenaries in skill and courage.
+ The oldest preserved documents written in Dalmatian are some 13th century inventories, in the Ragusan dialect.
+ After WWI, by the Treaty of London, Italy obtained Zara and some northern Dalmatian islands.
+ The wilds reach Pet Paradiso and try to sneak in by disguising themselves as pets, with Giselle as a dalmatian and McSquizzy as a chihuahua.
+ Another famous Dalmatian irredentist was Arturo Colautti.
