Northern Italian or North Italian, also called Padanian or rarely Cisalpine, is a variety of the Romance languages spoken approximately in Northern Italy and in adjacent territories such as Italian Switzerland, San Marino, Monaco and part of Istria (Croatia).
All specialists of the Romance languages agree on the existence of "Northern Italian" but they disagree on its accurate definition. It can be considered either:
The main regional varieties (or 'dialects' or 'languages') which compose Northern Italian are the following:
Northern Italian is spoken daily by a large population, especially in Italy, Switzerland and San Marino. Nonetheless it has no official recognition. The Monégasque variety of the Ligurian dialect is taught in Monaco's primary schools but is not an official language. Everywhere, Northern Italian is dominated by official languages such as Italian (in Italy, Switzerland and San Marino), French (in Monaco) and Croatian (in Croatia).
Language consciousness is quite ambiguous: most Northern Italian speakers consider they speak a 'dialect' of Italian but a lot of regional cultural movements view those 'dialects' as 'languages'. The consciousness of a Northern Italian linguistic unity is weak.
Piedmontese is the only variety which enjoys a steady codification and an emerging standard. Other varieties are barely or not codified. Intents of a united Northern Italian codification remain experimental.