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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rumanian

Roumanian \Rou*ma"ni*an\, a. [Written also Rumanian and Romanian.] [From Roumania, the name of the country, Roumanian Rom[^a]nia, fr. Rom[^a]n Roumanian, L. Romanus Roman.] Of or pertaining to Roumania.

Rumanian

Roumanian \Rou*ma"ni*an\, n. An inhabitant of Roumania; also, the language of Roumania, one of the Romance or Romanic languages descended from Latin, but containing many words from other languages, as Slavic, Turkish, and Greek. [Written also Rumanian and Romanian.]

Usage examples of "rumanian".

Dissenting diplomats from abroad sent messages which expressed the Allied Powers opinion that it was necessary that the Hungarian Government follow the example of the Rumanian King Michael, and the Hungarian Ambassador at Ankara Voernle received similar advice from the English Ambassador in the same town.

On the printing press, uncounted sums of Bulgarian leva and Rumanian bani and Turkish paras, all of it apparently worth something somewhere.

In the early spring of 1919, when Hungary was being invaded by Czecho-Slovak troops, Italians and Rumanians, and was threatened with an invasion from the Allies Count Karolyi fled and the government fell into the hands of the radical Socialist, Bela Kun, who soon established intimate relations with the Bolshevist government at Moscow.

Belgians, Frenchmen, Americans, Norwegians, Swedes, Rumanians, Poles, etc.

Bohemian translation, two Danish, two Dutch, two French, nine German, three Hungarian, three Italian, two Polish, one Romaic, one Rumanian, four Russian and three Spanish translations.

Its streets were thronged with soldiers, German, Hungarian, Italian, Rumanian, Slovakian, many of them taking the air with their girl friends on their arm.

First of all, Hungary was a signatory to the Anti-Commintern Pact and after the Finnish, Italian, Rumanian, and Slovakian declarations of war, she would have been brought into an impossible foreign political situation with these strong allies.

He was an old man looking like a bit player in a Rumanian smaltz opera, sometimes he gave me a small piece of chewing tobacco.

In 1941 the Commandant, desperate at the crazy expansion orders from Berlin, combed the countryside for builders and mechanics and put them to work at once-Jew, Pole, Czech, Croat, Rumanian it made little difference, Mutterperl among them-in conditions of housing, nourishment, and discipline that were by outside standards unspeakable, but in Auschwitz something like luxury.

All morning had to be spent extracting information from those who could speak English among the Russians, Norwegians, Swedes, Danes, Bulgarians, Rumanians and some Greeks who comprised this drop.

Americans and Englishmen, when they become acquainted with the Balkans, feel an astonished contempt when they study the mutual enmities of Bulgarians and Serbs, or Hungarians and Rumanians.