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Romanian translations
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Some facts about Romanian language
Romanian language, member of the Romance group of the Italic
subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. It is
spoken by about 22 million people in Romania, where it is
the official language, by 3 million people in Moldova, and
by perhaps another 1 million persons scattered in Bulgaria,
Greece, Macedonia, Albania, Yugoslavia (now Serbia and Montenegro),
and Hungary. At the present time Romanian is written in the
Roman alphabet, to which have been added the symbols a, a,
i, s, and t. In Moldova under Soviet rule, however, Cyrillic
characters were used for Romanian. A distinctive feature of
Romanian is the attachment of the definite article to the
noun as a suffix, as in omul (literally, “man-the”).
The oldest surviving Romanian texts are from the 16th cent.,
and there are four major dialects of the language.
History
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
Ardeal) became a Roman province. For the next 165 years, there
is evidence of considerable Roman colonization in the area,
the region being in close communication with the rest of the
Roman empire. Vulgar Latin became the language of the administration
and commerce.
Under the pressure of the Free Dacians and of the Goths, the
Roman administration and legions were withdrawn from Dacia
between 271-275. Whether the Romanians are the descendants
of these people that abandoned the area and settled south
of Danube or of the people that remained in Dacia is a matter
of debate. For further discussion, see Origin of Romanians.
Due to its geographical isolation, Romanian was probably the
first language that split and until the modern age was not
influenced by other Romance languages, so the grammar is roughly
similar to that of Latin, keeping declensions and the neuter
gender, unlike any other Romance language.
All the dialects of Romanian are believed to have been unified
in a common language until sometime between the 7th and the
10th century when the area was influenced by the Byzantine
Empire and Romanian came under the influence of the Slavic
language. Aromanian has very few Slavonic words. Also, the
variations in the Daco-Romanian dialect (spoken throughout
Romania and Moldova) are very small, which is quite remarkable,
as until the Modern Era there was almost no connection between
Romanians in various regions. The use of this uniform Daco-Romanian
dialect extends well beyond the borders of the Romanian state:
a Romanian-speaker from Moldova speaks the same language as
a Romanian-speaker from the Serbian Banat.
It is also noteworthy that Romanian was the only Romance language
that was not under the cultural influence of the Roman Catholic
Church, instead being influenced by the Orthodox Church, Slavonic,
Greek and Turkish cultures.
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