English
Etymology
From Romanian Cluj-Napoca, from Cluj, with the name of the Roman settlement Napoca added in 1974.
Proper noun
Cluj-Napoca
- (formal) Cluj (a city in Cluj County, Romania).
Usage notes
- This form is rarely used outside of official contexts, Cluj being ubiquitous in common parlance.
Translations
city in Romania
- Czech: Kluž (cs) f
- Dutch: Cluj-Napoca n
- French: Cluj-Napoca (fr) f, Cluj (fr) f, Clausembourg (fr) m (historical), Clausenbourg m (historical)
- German: Klausenburg n, Cluj-Napoca n, Clausenburg n
- Hungarian: Kolozsvár (hu)
- Italian: Cluj-Napoca, Clausemburgo m (historical)
- Japanese: クルジュ゠ナポカ (Kuruju-Napoka)
- Latin: Claudiopolis f (Medieval Latin), Claudianopolis f (Medieval Latin), Napoca f (ancient), Castrum Clus (Medieval Latin)
- Polish: Kluż-Napoka (pl) m or f
- Romanian: Cluj, Cluj-Napoca (ro) f, Cluș
- Russian: Клуж-Напо́ка m or f (Kluž-Napóka)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Клуж-Напока m
- Roman: Kluž-Napoka m, Cluj-Napoca m
- Slovak: Kluž m
- Turkish: Kaloşvar
- Yiddish: קלויזנבורג (kloyznburg)
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Romanian
Etymology
From Cluj + Napoca.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkluʒ naˈpoka/
Proper noun
Cluj-Napoca f
- (formal) a city in Cluj County, Romania