Search for crossword answers and clues
Rumanian capital
Answer for the clue "Rumanian capital ", 9 letters:
bucharest
Alternative clues for the word bucharest
Word definitions for bucharest in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bucharest (; , ) is the capital and largest city of Romania , as well as its cultural, industrial, and financial centre. It is located in the southeast of the country, at , on the banks of the Dâmbovița River , less than north of the Danube River and the ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. The capital city of Romania.
Usage examples of bucharest.
Finally Mary arrives in exotic Bucharest to take up her duties, confident, refreshingly candid-and dangerously innocent.
Our experienced career diplomat in Bucharest screwed up, and we were out in the cold.
She had been invited to live in Bucharest, one of the most exciting capitals of the world, reporting to the President, being in the center of his people-to-people concept.
Chapter Seven OTOPENI Airport, ten miles from the heart of Bucharest, is a modern airport, built to facilitate the flow of travelers from nearby iron curtain countries as well as to take care of the lesser number of Western tourists who visit Remania each year.
At last they reached the center of Bucharest, which was very beautiful.
THE American embassy in Bucharest is a white, semi-Gothic two-story building with.
There are seventy-five embassies in Bucharest, and on any given night some of them are celebrating something.
President, it occurred to me that you could get headlines all over the world if you made Bucharest a sister city of some American city.
Trees and flowers blossomed everywhere in Bucharest, and the parks were green.
The plane- made the five-thousand-mile flight to Bucharest in a little over two and a half hours.
As they neared the outskirts of Bucharest they drove by fields of sunflowers, their faces moving toward the sun.
THE decorations for the Fourth of July party were flown into Bucharest late Saturday afternoon and trucked directly to a United States government warehouse.
And of course I came via Galatz, Bucharest and Pitesti, chiefly to avoid the mountain passes.
It had happened during his third year in Bucharest while he was boarding at the college there.
The college had often used to borrow old documents and records concerning Wallachian and ancient Romanian matters from Pitesti, for a great amount of historical material had been taken there for safety from Ploiesti and Bucharest during World War II.