comb. form, on Gr. models, of L. Umbr-, Umber (see UMBRIAN), occurring in a few terms, as Umbro-Etruscan, -Latin, -Oscan, -Roman, -Sabellian, Samnite.
Also, with reference to the Umbrian school of painting, Umbro-Florentine, -Siennese (1866).
1853. Jrnl. Ethnol. Soc. (1856), IV. 67. This inscription differs from those which are found in the Umbro-Etruscan or Rasenic districts.
1858. G. Robertson, Earliest Inhabitants Italy, 46. The migration of the Umbro-Sabellian races.
1862. T. Clark, Handbk. Compar. Grammar, 24. The Latin language has some such relation to the Umbro-Samnite, as the Ionic has to the Doric.
1880. Encycl. Brit., XIII. 496/1. The features common to Umbro-Roman and the Neapolitan dialects.
1890. Contemp. Rev., Aug., 265. This Umbro-Latin Aryan race must have entered Italy considerably more than two thousand years before the commencement of our era.