Italy (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
Yes
None of the countries actually fought against WW1. America hesitated to join at first since it was made of immigrants and it could cause the empire to break apart. However, due to Germany's constant naval attacks and Zimmerman telegram, it did join. The main fear of the countries was that they would become isolated so all countries had formed allies. There was none that fought against WW1.
Rome did not have a military strategy to conquer Italy because she did not have a plan to conquer Italy. Her expansion into Italy was the result of winning several separate wars, sometimes quite apart in history, which were fought for different reasons.
The first territories outside peninsular Italy that Rome acquired were western Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica. They were taken over from the Carthaginians after the First Punic War. The first territory acquired outside present day Italy, apart from Corsica, was southern Spain. It was taken over from the Carthaginians after the Second Punic War.
every one apart from the Japanese the Germans and the Italian's. hope this helps
obviously Barcelona, as it is one of the most famous teams around the world, and probably one of the best ones. apart from having fans in Spain, it also has fans in England, France and Italy
Italy is a part of Europe.
Italy is part of Europe.
Brazil is often called the greatest footballing nation ever, with a total of FIVE FIFA world cups - the highest in history. Apart from Brazil, countries like Germany, Italy, France and Spain are good footballing countries.
Canada allies are basically , states , uk , france and most of europe and enemies are iran , russia and china
the world would fall apart and we would all live on jupiter
Italy (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
europe
The distance between Madrid, Spain and Sydney, Australia is 10996 miles (17696 km).
Yes it was
United States supported the Allies in WW2. This included England (countries of the Commonwealth including Australia and New Zealand), Russia, China and France just to name a few.