Piemonte.
Piemonte.
Piemonte.

Piemonte (Yi-thai-li-ngî: Piemonte, fat-yîm:[pjeˈmonte]) he Yi-thai-li sî-pet ke yit-ke Thai-khî. Thai-khî mien-chit yû 25,399 phìn-fông kûng-lî khi̍p thai-yok 430 van ngìn-khiéu. Thai-khî Sú-fú he Torino.

Piemonte sâm-mien pûn Alpes sân Sân-mak pâu vì, pâu-koat Po Hò ke hí-ngièn Viso Sân-mak, khi̍p Rosa Fûng. Thai-khî lâu Fap-koet, Sui-sṳ, khi̍p Yi-thai-li Lombardia, Liguria, Emilia-Romagna khi̍p Valle d'Aosta Thai-khî siông-lìn.

Piemonte ke tâi thi he yit-khoài nùng sán fûng-chiuk ke thi-khî, sṳ̀n sán séu-ma̍k, thàu-mí, ngiu̍k tsuk nit khi̍p phù-thò. Kâi khî ya-he chú-yeu ke kûng-ngia̍p chûng-sîm, thi̍t-phe̍t he Torino, he Fiat chhâ chhòng ke Chúng-phu só-chhai-thi. 2006-ngièn 2-ngie̍t, Torino sṳ̀n-kûng chú phan 2006-ngièn Tûng-kui Olympic Yun-thûng-fi.

Li̍t-sṳ́

Thi-lî

Vùn-fa

Kau-yuk

Kín-tiám

Kîn-chi

Ngìn-khiéu

Hàng-chṳn

Sa-fi

Kâu-thûng

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