In short, I agree with @JoErNanO, that you should always try to use basic language spoken in a country you are visiting.
My experience from some years of living in three different Italian regions (Piedmont, Veneto, Lombardy) and different cities (Milan, Turin, Padua, Abano, ..) says, the percentage of Italians that prefer to speak in the Italian, rather than a foreign language, should be somewhere above 95%. Although, it varies tremendously from city to city. In smaller, unpopular, less international cities people tend to favor foreign languages less.
And what makes that 5 percent?
According to me, outside these groups anyone will welcome your effort in making an Italian conversation, at least as long as they don’t feel you are suffering in grasping the topic.
I think you should always try to use basic foreign language spoken in country XXX when visiting XXX. It shows that you are making an effort to communicate but most importantly to absorb part of the local culture. I strongly doubt anyone will get offended if you try to speak their language. My experience shows quite the opposite. If, after the salutations, your interlocutor then decides to shift to English then follow up in English. If you decide that your knowledge doesn’t allow you to go further than hello and goodbye then shift the conversation language to English.
I don’t know if English is common in rural areas of Sardinia or in the rest of Italy. Regardless, I would still use basic Italian when you can and English anytime else.
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5 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024