释义 |
RomanyRo‧ma‧ny /ˈrəʊməni $ ˈrɑː-/ noun (plural Romanies)  RomanyOrigin: 1800-1900 Romany romani ‘gypsy’ (adjective), from rom ‘gypsy man’, from Sanskrit domba ‘musician of low social rank’ - Chagrin A strong belief in the supernatural characterises communities of Romany gypsies.
- Marius jerked his head at them in disapproval but I liked their Romany appeal.
- Noah said everything - including the attack on her - has been brought about by her departure from Romany ways.
- Some in the traditional Romany caravans ... the youngsters in more modern accomodation.
- With five fences left, Party Politics jumped past Romany King and was never headed again.
- You've once again proved your friendship to the Romany people.
► Languagesaccented, adjectiveAfrikaans, nounAnglo-Saxon, nounArabic, nounBengali, nounbilingual, adjectiveCantonese, nounChinese, nounconversant, adjectivecreole, nounDanish, noundialect, noundictation, noundirect method, noundub, verbDutch, nounEnglish, nounEsperanto, nounFarsi, nounFlemish, nounfluent, adjectiveFrancophone, adjectiveFranglais, nounFrench, adjectiveGaelic, nounGerman, nounGermanic, adjectiveGreek, nounHebraic, adjectiveHebrew, nounHindi, nounIndo-European, adjectiveItalian, nounItalo-, prefixJapanese, nounLatin, nounLatin, adjectivelinguist, nounlinguistics, nounMandarin, nounMaori, nounmodern language, nounmonolingual, adjectivemother tongue, nounmultilingual, adjectivenative speaker, nounoral, nounpatois, nounPersian, nounPolish, adjectivePortuguese, nounRomance language, nounRomany, nounRussian, nounSanskrit, nounsecond language, nounSemitic, adjectivesign, nounsign, verbsign language, nounSinhalese, nounSpanish, nounspeak, verb-speak, suffixspeaker, nounSwedish, nountransliterate, verbTurkish, nounUrdu, nounusage, nounvernacular, nounvocabulary, nounWelsh, noun NOUN► king· With five fences left, Party Politics jumped past Romany King and was never headed again. 1[countable] a gypsy2[uncountable] the language traditionally used by the gypsy people—Romany adjective |