Romanian (also spelled Rumanian) is the official language
of Romania, a country on the eastern half of the Balkan Peninsula. It also happens to be the only Romance language in Eastern Europe. Because of its geographical location, Romanian has developed differently from the
other Romance languages. Slavic and Hungarian influences on Romanian are particularly
apparent. Despite this foreign influence, it is the closest to Latin, in a grammatical
sense, of all the Romance languages.
There are four dialects of Romanian: Daco-Romanian, which
is the basic standard language; Aromanian or Macedo-Romanian, which is spoken in scattered
communities in Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, and Bulgaria; Megleno-Romanian, which is a
nearly extinct dialect spoken in Northern Greece; and Istro-Romanian, which is spoken on
the Istrian Peninsula of Croatia.
Romanian was written in the Cyrillic script until the mid
1900s. Today it is written in the Roman alphabet. The first written documents in
Daco-Romanian date from 1521 and the first record of Aromanian dates from 1731. The
country of Moldova uses a variation of Daco-Romanian written in the Cyrillic script.
The following Romanian words look enough like English
to deceive you into thinking that you know what they mean-- but look out! If you tell
someone you are going to sweep the floor with a
bruma, their reaction might be
surprising.
Bruma means
frost in Romanian. And the word
cine, similar
to the English word for cinema, actually means
who.
In Romanian, there are two ways to address someone in
conversation: the familiar style and the formal style. The familiar form of
"you" is
tu; verbs used with
tu are conjugated in the 2nd person.
The formal form of "you" is
dumneata; verbs used with
dumneata are
conjugated in the 3rd person. The plural form of
tu is
voi and the plural
form of
dumneata is
dumneavoastrã.
The familiar form is used with friends or with people who
are younger than you, while the formal style of address is used with elders and with
people you don't know very well. Even though you know your mother, you should always
address her in the formal, using
dumneata. But if you are meeting someone younger
than you for the first time, you address them in the familiar, using
tu.
Because Romanian is a Romance language, many of the
words will seem familiar to English speakers. However, there are several grammatical
differences that learners need to watch out for. There are no definite articles (like the
English "the"), but there are indefinite articles (like the English
"a"). Subject pronouns are usually omitted because the conjugation of the verb
indicates the subject. The auxiliary verb
a vrea ("to wish") is used in
front of a verb to indicate the future tense. The auxiliary verb
a avrea ("to
have") is used in front of a verb to indicate the past tense.
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