Romanian language
- Romanian language
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The name Romanian is usually identified with Daco-Romanian, one of the four major dialects of Balkan Romance. Other dialects are Aromanian (Macedo-Romanian), spoken in scattered communities in Greece, Macedonia, Albania, and Bulgaria; the nearly extinct Megleno-Romanian, spoken in northern Greece; and Istro-Romanian, spoken on Croatia's Istrian Peninsula. The earliest known continuous text in Romanian dates from 1521. Romanian's phonology, grammar, and vocabulary reflect its relative isolation from other Romance languages and its close contact with the Slavic languages. Written in the Cyrillic alphabet until the 19th century, Romanian now uses the Latin alphabet.
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Romance language spoken primarily in Romania and Moldova. Four principal dialects may be distinguished: Daco-Romanian, the basis of the standard language, spoken in Romania and Moldova in several regional variants; Aromanian, or Macedo-Romanian, spoken in scattered communities in Greece, Albania, Bulgaria, Kosovo, and Serbia; Megleno-Romanian, a nearly extinct dialect of northern Greece; and Istro-Romanian, also nearly extinct, spoken on the Istrian Peninsula of Croatia. Mutual intelligibility between the major dialects is difficult; the Megleno-Romanian, Istro-Romanian, and Aromanian are sometimes classed as languages distinct from Romanian proper, or Daco-Romanian, which has many slightly varying dialects of its own. Moldovan, the national language of Moldova, is a form of Daco-Romanian. It is written in the Latin alphabet.The first known text in Daco-Romanian dates from 1521, and the earliest inscription in Aromanian is dated 1731. Romanian phonology and grammar have developed in rather different directions from those of most other Romance languages because of the language's relative isolation from other Romance languages and its close contact with the Slavic languages and Hungarian. Romanian continues a Latin (Latin language) distinction between long o and short u, fused in most other Romance languages, but, like almost all others, it has lost the Latin distinction between long e and short i. In consonant clusters there has been a tendency to replace velar consonants k and g with labial consonants, such as p, b, or m (e.g., Latin ŏcto “eight,” Romanian opt; Latin cognatum “relative, kinsman,” Romanian cumnat). Nouns in Romanian have two cases, direct (nominative-objective) and oblique (possessive-dative), and have separate singular and plural forms for the noun standing alone and the noun with the definite article suffixed. Verbs have a shortened infinitive (e.g., a cînta from Latin cantare “to sing”), and the future tense is formed by a compound of the verb a vrea “to wish” plus the infinitive of the verb—voi cînta “I will sing”; an alternative method of future formation is to use the auxiliary verb a avea “to have” plus să plus the subjunctive of the verb—am să cînt “I will sing.”The vocabulary of Romanian is, of course, based on that of Latin, but because of Romanian's isolation, loanwords from non-Romance languages are frequent. Most common are Slavic words, but borrowings from Turkish, Hungarian, and Albanian also occur.* * *
Universalium. 2010.
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Romanian language — Not to be confused with Romani language. Romanian, Daco Romanian română, limba română Pronunciation [roˈmɨnə] Spoken in By a majority … Wikipedia
Romanian language — … Википедия
History of the Romanian language — Dacia and Romanization= The Romanian territory was inhabited in ancient times by the Dacians, an Indo European people. They were defeated by the Roman Empire in 106 and part of Dacia (Oltenia, Banat and Transylvania) became a Roman province.… … Wikipedia
Istro-Romanian language — language name=Istro Romanian nativename=Vlăşeşte/Rumâreşte local name=Rumêri kuvinta familycolor=Indo European states=flag|Croatia region=Istria speakers=1000 fam2=Italics fam3=Latin fam4=Romance languages fam5=Eastern Romance iso2=roa|iso3=ruo… … Wikipedia
Varieties of the Romanian language — Romanian dialects/varieties are not as varied as in many other Romance languages. Romanians themselves refer to them as accents or graiuri ( speeches / varieties ) rather than dialects. The differences between the varieties of Daco Romanian are… … Wikipedia
Megleno-Romanian language — Megleno Romanian Vlăheşte Spoken in Greece, Republic of Macedonia, Romania, Turkey[1] Region Balkans … Wikipedia
Proto-Romanian language — Proto Romanian (also known as Common Romanian , româna comună or Ancient Romanian , străromâna) is a Romance language evolved from Vulgar Latin and considered to have been spoken by the ancestors of today s Romanians and related Balkan Latin… … Wikipedia
Romanian philosophy — is a name covering either a) the philosophy done in Romania or by Romanians, or b) an ethnic philosophy, which expresses at a high level the fundamental features of the Romanian spirituality, or which elevates to a philosophical level the… … Wikipedia
Romanian grammar — Romanian (technically called Daco Romanian ) shares practically the same grammar and most of the vocabulary and phonological processes with the other three surviving Eastern Romance languages: Aromanian, Megleno Romanian, and Istro Romanian.As a… … Wikipedia
Romanian Orthodox Church — (Romanian Patriarchy) Coat of arms Founder (as metropolis of Romania) Nifon, Carol I (as patriarchy of Romania) Miron Cristea, Ferdinand I … Wikipedia
Фильмы
- Great Patriotic War (Soviet people’s participation in World War II in 1941-1945)., 1965 — A historical film about the Great Patriotic War.
- The Symphony of Peace., 1981 — About the I Moscow Festival of Symphonic Music.
- The Mighty Power Of the Commowealth., 1984 — The film tells about the activity of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA).


