Dragon is the same in English and Romanian.
Fiul diavolului is a Romanian equivalent of 'Son of the devil'. Fiul dracului is a Romanian equivalent of 'Son of the dragon'.
In general, there is no specific dragon type called Romanian in popular literature or fantasy works. However, dragons are commonly featured in various fantasy novels, such as "Eragon" by Christopher Paolini or "The Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkien. These books depict different dragon types with unique characteristics, but none specifically referred to as Romanian dragons.
Vlad, or Dracula, was born in 1431 in Transylvania into a noble family. His father was called "Dracul," meaning "dragon" or "devil" in Romanian because he belonged to the Order of the Dragon, which fought the Muslim Ottoman Empire. "Dracula" means "son of Dracul" in Romanian.
The Romanian language equivalent of Romanian is român.
Român is the Romanian equivalent of 'Romanian'. It's the form that's used to identify a 'Romanian' male. The form for a 'Romanian' female is Româncă.
The Romanian capital is Bucharest (București in Romanian).
Vlad's Romanian surname Dracula (also spelled "Draculea", "Drakulya,"drackuliea"), which he was referred to in several documents, means "Son of the dragon" and points to his father, Vlad Dracul, who received that moniker from his subjects because he had joined the Order of the Dragon. Dracul, derived from the Latin word Draco meant "dragon", derived from the Greek word Dracon, though in modern Romanian it means "devil". for further info pls check; http://vladiiitheimpaler.blogspot.com/
meaning of his name and his fathers name are as below; Vlad's Romanian surname Dracula (also spelled "Draculea", "Drakulya,"drackuliea"), which he was referred to in several documents, means "Son of the dragon" and points to his father, Vlad Dracul, who received that moniker from his subjects because he had joined the Order of the Dragon. Dracul, derived from the Latin word Draco meant "dragon", derived from the Greek word Dracon, though in modern Romanian it means "devil".
Only if you are a Romanian citizen.
You can get a passport to anywhere no matter if you are married to someone of that nationality or not. If you want to go to Romania that go with or without a romanian husband or not. You can become a Romanian citizen if you marry a Romanian and therefore get a Romanian passport.
Pentru is the Romanian equivalent of 'for'.
In Romanian it is - vampirVampir