On Tue, 1 Feb 2005, Gerard Meijssen wrote:
Mark Williamson wrote:
And Gerard, please note that Alfio, unlike you, is a native Italian speaker.
Mark
Which is a totally irrelevant remark. fyi I asked Sabine, she thinks that having it as it is written is to be preferrred; her argument is that things that are "strange" atract more curiosity. Her credentials as to the Italian language are obvious and adequate.
Let's keep the tone relaxed, people. I'll just go on record saying that I couldn't care less if "Italiano" is capitalized or not, and I think that a vast majority of native speakers feel the same.
The old, formal rule was to always have language names and nationality adjectives ("the English people") always capitalized, like one can find in any book from, say, 50 years ago. Common use nowadays is less strict, one can find both forms. A capitalized nationality adjective feels slightly strange, a capitalized language name less so.
So the choice can be freely made on different grounds than language correctness.
Alfio