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The Romanian Wikipedia (abr. ro.wiki or ro.wp; [1] Romanian: Wikipedia în limba română) is the Romanian language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.Started on 12 July 2003, as of 13 February 2025 this edition has 510,644 articles and is the 30th largest Wikipedia edition. [2]
Simona.onicel (talk · contribs) — Near-native English, fluent Spanish (Latin America), 7+ years experience in Spanish to English translations. Thinker78 (talk · contribs) — Near-native English, native Spanish (Guatemala), translator without certification. I can help in verifying a translation, translating up to a paragraph or two mostly ...
The history of the Romanian language started in the Roman provinces north of the Jireček Line in Classical antiquity but there are 3 main hypotheses about its exact territory: the autochthony thesis (it developed in left-Danube Dacia only), the discontinuation thesis (it developed in right-Danube provinces only), and the "as-well-as" thesis that supports the language development on both sides ...
This is a list of key publications of the Bible and religious literature in various Baltic-Romani dialects: In 1933, Janis Leimanis (1886–1954), a Roma missionary, translated the Gospel of John, the Lord's Prayer, and the Ten Commandments into the Latvian Romani (Chúkhno) dialect.
Wikipedia:Basic copyediting, a task commonly following translation; Wikipedia:Pages needing translation into English, for pages on the English Wikipedia that will shortly be deleted unless translated; Wikipedia:Translating German Wikipedia; Wikipedia:Translators available; Wikipedia:WikiProject Cross-language Editing and Learning Exchange
Her trilogy presents the evolution of the Spanish language through loose translations of dramatic, poetic, and philosophical writings from the Medieval, Golden Age, and Modernist eras into contemporary Caribbean, Latin American, and Nuyorican Spanish expressions. Braschi's translations of classical texts in Iberian Spanish (into other regional ...
Unfortunately, this meant that parishioners could no longer understand the sermons of their priests, forcing the Council of Tours in 813 to issue an edict that priests needed to translate their speeches into the rustica romana lingua, an explicit acknowledgement of the reality of the Romance languages as separate languages from Latin. [47]: 6
Before the publication of the Biblia de la București, other partial translations were published, such as the Slavic-Romanian Tetraevangelion (Gospel) (Sibiu, 1551), Coresi's Tetraevangelion (Brașov, 1561), The Book of Psalms from Brașov (1570), the Palia de la Orăștie (Saxopolitan Old Testament) from 1581/1582 (the translators were Calvinist pastors from Transylvania), The New Testament ...