See also: Constanta
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Romanian Constanța.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /kɒnˈstæntsə/
- (US) IPA(key): /kənˈstɑːn(t)sə/
Proper noun
Constanța
- A city, the county seat of Constanța County, Romania.
- A county in eastern Romania.
Translations
city in Romania
- Arabic: كونستانتسا f, قنسطنطة f
- Armenian: Կոնստանցա (hy) (Konstancʻa)
- Aromanian: Custantsã f, Custantse f (indefinite), Custantsa f (definite)
- Azerbaijani: Konstansa (az)
- Belarusian: Канста́нца f (Kanstánca)
- Bulgarian: Кюсте́нджа (Kjusténdža)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 康斯坦察 (zh) (Kāngsītǎnchá)
- French: Constanța (fr) f
- Gagauz: Konstanţa
- Georgian: კონსტანცა (ḳonsṭanca)
- German: Konstanza (de) n
- Greek: Κωνστάντζα (el) f (Konstántza), Κωνστάντια f (Konstántia)
- Hungarian: Konstanca (hu)
- Italian: Costanza (it) f
- Japanese: コンスタンツァ
- Korean: 콘스탄차 (Konseutancha)
- Latin: Constantia f
- Ottoman Turkish: كوستنجه (köstence)
- Persian: کنستانتسا
- Polish: Konstanca (pl) f
- Portuguese: Constança
- Romanian: Constanța (ro)
- Russian: Конста́нца f (Konstánca)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Констанца f
- Spanish: Constanza (es) f
- Tatar: Күстәнҗә (Küstäncä)
- Turkish: Köstence f
- Ukrainian: Конста́нца f (Konstánca)
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Romanian
Etymology
Originally known as Tomis in antiquity, the city was later renamed Constantiana after Flavia Julia Constantia, sister of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great; it was first attested as Constantia, or Κωνστάντια (Kōnstántia) around the mid 10th century.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Constanța
- Constanța (the capital city of Constanța County, Romania)
- a county of Romania
- a female given name, equivalent to English Constance
Declension
The template Template:ro-noun-f-a does not use the parameter(s): 1=Constanț
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
Declension of Constanța
singular only
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indefinite
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definite
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nominative-accusative
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Constanța
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Constanțaua
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genitive-dative
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Constanțale
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Constanțalei
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vocative
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Constanța
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See also