In this paper, a case of syntactic variation is discussed which emerges in the Italian spoken in Veneto. It concerns the position of subject noun phrases which represent the new information of the clause: While in Italian, a new information subject obligatorily follows the verb, it may precede the verb in Veneto Italian. When it precedes the verb, a new information subject is characterized by a special intonation which recalls similar patterns in languages like English and French. This instance of syntactic variation is presumably due to the contact between Italian and the dialectal varieties spoken by the same community. As in other cases of linguistic contact, it affects a word order motivated by discourse considerations and gives rise t...