Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
(feat. Bogdan de la Oradea) How can I not love her: 11 April 2014: Nek Music "De-aș mai avea o mică șansă" If I'd have a small chance: 18 April 2014: Nek Music "Îmi stă bine în brațe la tine" (feat. Katy de la Buzău) I look good in your arms: 18 April 2014: Nek Music "O mie de nopți" (feat. Nicoleta Ceaunică) A thousand nights: 19 ...
Map of Romania in 1919 with new regions annexed to it. Great Union Day (Romanian: Ziua Marii Uniri; also called Unification Day [1] or National Day) is a Romanian national holiday celebrated on 1 December to mark the 1918 Great Union (the unification of Transylvania, Bassarabia, and Bukovina with the Kingdom of Romania). [2]
3rei Sud Est (also spelled 3 Sud Est or 3SE, styled forms of Trei Sud-Est, Romanian pronunciation: [ˈtrej suˈdest]) is a dance music group from Romania. The group was formed in 1997.
The Romanian Language Day (Romanian: Ziua Limbii Române, Romanian pronunciation: [ˈziwa ˈlimbij roˈmɨne]) is a holiday in Romania and Moldova celebrated every 31 August for the Romanian language.
In 1946, the English lyrics were written by Harold Barlow and Phil Brito who had their popular recording hit the charts in May 1946 under the title of "Mama". British singer David Whitfield also had a hit with the song, which reached number 12 in the UK Singles Chart in 1955. [6] The British lyrics did differ from the American ones.
Mama Tata or Mama Chi (Mother Father) is a Christian syncretistic religion found in parts of Panama. It is a mixture of Catholicism and animism that has become popular among the Guaymí people. It began in the second half of the twentieth century, after prophetess Little Mama had a vision of Jesus riding up to her on a motorcycle.
Malu cu Flori is a commune in Dâmbovița County, Muntenia, Romania with a population of 2,484 people as of 2021. It is composed of five villages: Capu Coastei, Copăceni, Malu cu Flori, Micloșanii Mari, and Micloșanii Mici. The commune is located in the northwestern part of the county, on the border with Argeș County.
Mărțișor on a Moldovan stamp. Nowadays a Mărțișor is made from silk strings, almost exclusively red and white. Before the 19th century various other colors were used: black and white in Mehedinți and in Aromanian communities, red only in Vâlcea, Romanați, Argeș, Neamț, and Vaslui, black and red in Brăila, white and blue in Vrancea, or even multiple colours in areas of southern ...