Romania

[roh-mey-nee-uh, ‐meyn-yuh] /roʊˈmeɪ ni ə, ‐ˈmeɪn yə/
noun
1.
a republic in SE Europe, bordering on the Black Sea. 91,699 sq. mi. (237,500 sq. km).
Capital: Bucharest.
Romanian Ro·mâ·nia,
[raw-muh-nyah] /rɔˈmʌ nyɑ/ (Show IPA)
.

România

[raw-muh-nyah; English roh-mey-nee-uh, -meyn-yuh] /rɔˈmʌ nyɑ; English roʊˈmeɪ ni ə, -ˈmeɪn yə/
noun
1.
Romanian name of Romania.
Examples from the web for Romania
  • Winter is much balmier compared to other cities in southern Romania.
British Dictionary definitions for Romania

Romania

/rəʊˈmeɪnɪə/
noun
1.
a republic in SE Europe, bordering on the Black Sea: united in 1861; became independent in 1878; Communist government set up in 1945; became a socialist republic in 1965; a more democratic regime was installed after a revolution in 1989; joined the EU in 2007. It consists chiefly of a great central arc of the Carpathian Mountains and Transylvanian Alps, with the plains of Walachia, Moldavia, and Dobriya on the south and east and the Pannonian Plain in the west Official language: Romanian. Religion: Romanian Orthodox (Christian) majority. Currency: leu. Capital: Bucharest Pop: 21 790 479 (2013 est). Area: 237 500 sq km (91 699 sq miles)
Word Origin and History for Romania

Eastern European nation, name taken officially in 1861 at the union of Wallachia and Moldavia, from Latin Romani "people from Rome," which was used to describe the descendants of colonists there from Roman times; see Roman + -ia. In early use often Rumania, or, from French, Roumania. Related: Romanian; Rumanian; Roumanian.

Romania in Culture

Romania definition


Republic in southeastern Europe on the northeast Balkan Peninsula, bordered by Hungary to the northwest, Ukraine to the northeast, Moldova and the Black Sea to the east, Bulgaria to the south, and the former Yugoslavia to the southwest. Its capital and largest city is Bucharest.

Note: During World War II, Romania was allied to the Axis Powers but joined the Allies in 1944.
Note: Occupied by Soviet troops in 1944, Romania became a people's republic on the model of the Soviet Union in 1947.
Note: A former Eastern Bloc country, Romania was ruled in the 1970s and 1980s by communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, who was overthrown and executed during a bloody revolution in 1989. (See collapse of communism.)