Romanian language

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Romanian—rarely written Rumanian, Roumanian—(in its own language: româna, limba română [roˈmɨna, ˈlimba roˈmɨnə]) is a Romance language spoken mainly in Romania, in Moldova and in scattered little areas across southeastern Europe (mostly in Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, the Republic of Macedonia, Greece, Bulgaria and Ukraine).

It is the official state language of Romania and Moldova. In Moldova, it is officially called Moldovan or more rarely Moldavian (in Romanian: limba moldovenească). In spite of this naming discrepancy, both countries have nearly exactly the same standard language (the possible spelling differences are insignificant compared with those of British English and American English).

The main dialects are classified in Daco-Romanian, a core group comprising the vast majority of the dialects and being the basis of Standard Romanian, and three other dialects scattered in remote patches across the Balkans: Aromanian (southern Balkans), Megleno-Romanian (southern Balkans) and Istro-Romanian (Istria, Croatia). In those Balkanic enclaves, Romanian may be called Vlach, especially by surrounding populations (for instance, βλάχικα, vlachika in Greek).

Romanian is the only Romance language of central Europe. Therefore, in some aspects, it is slightly original compared with the rest of the Romance languages since it does not have any territorial contiguity with them. Nevertheless its structures are deeply Romance and very conservative compared with their Latin origins. For example, Romanian resembles more Latin than French does.

Writing system

Romanian is written with an adapted version of the Latin alphabet: A, Ă, Â, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, Î, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, Ș, T, Ț, U, V, W, X, Y, Z. It includes the following modified letters with diacritics: Ă, Â, Î, Ș and Ț (in an accurate typography, Ș and Ț are best written with a comma below, nevertheless, because of computing input problems, this comma is often replaced by a cedilla, that produces Ş and Ţ). The letters Q, W and Y only occur in foreign words.

Grapheme Pronunciation
(IPA)
A a [a]
Ă ă [ə]
 â [ɨ]
B b [b]
C c — [k]
— [tʃ] before e, i
CH ch — [k] (before e, i)
D d [d]
E e — [e], [e̯]
— sometimes [je]
F f [f]
Grapheme Pronunciation
(IPA)
G g — [g]
— [dʒ] before e, i
GH gh — [g] (before e, i)
H h [h]
I i [i], [j]
Î î [ɨ]
J j [ʒ]
K k [k]
L l [l]
M m [m]
Grapheme Pronunciation
(IPA)
N n [n]
O o [o], [o̯]
P p [p]
Q q [k]
R r [r]
S s [s]
Ș ș [ʃ]
T t [t]
Grapheme Pronunciation
(IPA)
Ț ț [ts]
U u [u], [w]
V v [v]
W w [v], [w]
X x [ks]
Y y [i], [j]
Z z [z]

For a long time, Romanian used to be written with the Cyrillic alphabet, since Romanian people belong to the cultural sphere of the Eastern Orthodox Church which favoured Greek o Greek-derived writting systems (as it is the case of the Cyrillic script). Nevertheless, several people intented to use the Latin alphabet, especially in the 18th century. The global shift toward the Latin alphabet occurred around 1860 as a unified Romanian state had emerged in 1859, as Romanian was beginning to be codified and as Romanians were experiencing the romantic nationalism of the 19th century, voluntarily bringing their language to its Latin origins and to other Romance languages. In the Soviet Union, however, Romanian-speaking communities were forced to use a new, russified Cyrillic script between 1938 and 1989, especially in Moldova, that had been annexed to the USSR in 1940 (simultaneously, the Soviet power considered "Moldovan" as a distinct language from Romanian). The separatist territory of Transnistria, created in 1990, goes on imposing the Soviet Cyrillic script to its Romanian-speaking community; the rest of Moldova has restored the common Latin alphabet since 1990.

Footnotes