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Libri

Libri is the Italian word for books, the plural of libro. It derives from the Latin liber, meaning a sheet of writing or a book. In Italian, libri is a masculine plural noun; the singular is libro, and common articles and adjectives agree in gender and number (il libro, i libri). The concept encompasses printed works, including fiction, non-fiction, textbooks, and reference volumes, as well as digital or electronic books in e-book formats. Books have played a central role in education, culture, and communication, housed in libraries and sold through bookstores and publishers. Cataloging and bibliographic systems identify editions by title, author, publisher, year, and ISBN, a standard introduced in the 20th century to facilitate distribution and retrieval. The history of libri spans manuscript culture, the invention of movable type by Gutenberg, and modern printing and digitalization, which have broadened access through online libraries and platforms. The term also appears in everyday language in phrases such as libri di testo (textbooks) or libri antichi (antique books). Libri is also an Italian surname; it denotes origin from a family associated with books or literacy, and may be encountered in Italian-speaking communities abroad. In contemporary usage, libri continues to evoke the culture of reading, libraries, publishing, and the ongoing shift toward digital media.