Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A native of Bucharest, he was born out of wedlock to Ion Luca Caragiale and Maria Constantinescu, an unmarried former Town Hall employee [3] who was 21 at the time. [4] Living his first years at his mother's house on Frumoasă Street, near Calea Victoriei (until the building was sold), [5] Mateiu had a half-sister, his mother's daughter from another extra-conjugal affair. [6]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Trei culori cunosc pe lume, Amintind de-un brav popor, Ce-i viteaz, cu vechi renume, În luptă triumfător. Multe secole luptară Străbunii noștri eroi, Să trăim stăpâni în țară, Ziditori ai lumii noi. Roșu, galben și albastru Este-al nostru tricolor. Se înalță ca un astru Gloriosul meu popor. Suntem un popor în lume Strâns ...
Dar noi, pătrunși la suflet de sfânta libertate, Jurăm că vom da mâna, 𝄆 să fim pururea frați 𝄇! O mamă văduvită de la Mihai cel Mare Pretinde de la fii-și 𝄆 azi mână d-ajutori 𝄇, Și blastămă cu lacrămi în ochi pe orișicare, În astfel de pericul 𝄆 s-ar face vânzători 𝄇!
In medicine (), bleeding diathesis is an unusual susceptibility to bleed mostly due to hypocoagulability (a condition of irregular and slow blood clotting), in turn caused by a coagulopathy (a defect in the system of coagulation).
Romanian has two grammatical numbers: singular and plural.Morphologically, the plural form is built by adding specific endings to the singular form. For example, nominative nouns without the definite article form the plural by adding one of the endings -i, -uri, -e, or -le.
"The Goat and Her Three Kids" or "The Goat with Three Kids" (Romanian: Capra cu trei iezi) is an 1875 short story, fable and fairy tale by Romanian author Ion Creangă. Figuratively illustrating for the notions of motherly love and childish disobedience, it recounts how a family of goats is ravaged by the Big Bad Wolf , allowed inside the ...
Their most common names are ursitori and ursitoare, [3] but variations appear locally, like ursători, ursoaie, ursońi, urzoaie, [4] ursite. [5] Similarly, in the Oltenia region, they are dialectally known as ursătóri(le), ursitóri(le), ursătoáre(le). [6]