Don't exist, probably a spelling error.
There is no Roman alphabet. It's called the Latin alphabet, and yes, the Romanian alphabet is a variety of the Latin alphabet, just as English is.
The Romanian alphabet is Latin.
That's easy 31
Iartă-mă. Romanian hasn't used the cyrillic alphabet for a very long time now.
I think the "scoala ardeleana" wanted in 1860 to change the cyrillic to latin because the romanian language is a latin language and it suits it better-----------The Latin alphabet become official in Principatele Unite ale Moldovei şi Ţării Româneşti in 1862, during the reign of Alexandru Ioan Cuza. The Romanian language is a Latin (Romanic) language; the Cyrillic alphabet was introduced many centuries ago by Bulgarians and Serbians monks speaking Slavic languages and unaware of the Romanian language.
No. Relatively few languages do this, though a few, like Romanian, do this occasionally (the Romanian alphabet has a letter Ă / ă that is pronounced as the schwa sound).
"Pang Ankop" is a Filipino term that means "for shelter" or "for protection." It is often used in the context of activities or projects aimed at providing housing or support for those in need, such as building homes for the homeless or creating community shelters.
The Romanian language equivalent of the answer is răspunsul.
In english, the answer would be "I am fine!" In romanian, it would be it`t translation , "Sunt bine!"
Portuguese people use the Latin alphabet. Same as the one Spanish, Italian, French and Romanian speakers use.
After 3 years of legally married with a Romanian citizen, you can apply for a parmanent residence (Romanian Passport).
The English Language uses the Roman Alphabet. Normally it is not noted when another language is written using the Roman Alphabet. Sometimes it is noted when referring to the Romanian Language. In Romania, the Roman Alphabet is used. In Moldavia, the Cyrillic Alphabet is used for the same language. Since all Western European Languages, except for Greek, use the Roman Alphabet, normally no one mentions it.