Roma

See also: Appendix:Variations of "roma"

English

Etymology 1

From Romani roma, plural of rom (man, husband, Romani man). The latter probably comes from Sanskrit डोम्ब (ḍomba, lower-caste person working as a wandering musician), from Sanskrit डमरु (ḍamaru, drum), which may have been borrowed from a Dravidian language.[1] Folk etymology pointed to a legend that the ethnic group were an exiled people from Roman Imperial times.

The other major categories of words for the Roma are cognates of Gypsy (words related to Egypt) and cognates of tzigane (words derived from Greek); see those entries for more information.

Alternative forms

  • Rroma

Proper noun

Roma

  1. A nomadic people with origins in India, the Romani.
  2. A subgroup of the Romani people found primarily in Eastern Europe.
  3. A variety of the Romani language (or occasionally) the Romani macrolanguage.
Translations
  • For translations which are exonyms (not cognates of the Romani term for themselves), see Gypsy.

Noun

Roma (plural Romas)

  1. A Rom; a member of the Romani people.
Translations

Adjective

Roma (not comparable)

  1. Romani: of or pertaining to the Romani people.
Translations

See also

References

  1. ^ Rom, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2024.

Etymology 2

From Latin and Italian Roma (Rome). Doublet of Rome and Rum.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. A number of places around the world:
    1. A town, the seat of the Maranoa Region, Queensland, Australia, from the Italian surname di Roma.
    2. A settlement in Maseru district, Lesotho.
    3. A town in Ascope province, La Libertad region, northern Peru.
    4. A commune in Botoșani County, Romania.
    5. A village in Valencia province, Valencia, Spain.
    6. A locality in central Gotland, Sweden.
    7. A city and border crossing point on the Rio Grande in Starr County, Texas, United States.
  2. A female given name from Latin of English-speakers.
  3. Alternative form of Rome:
    1. A major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire
    • 1896, W[alter] D[elaplaine] Scull, “Mrs. Platt”, in The Garden of the Matchboxes and Other Stories, London: Elkin Mathews, page 94:
      But it would have been so nice to have a private income, and to be able sometimes to go to Venezia, Firenze, Roma, those places with the beautiful names.
    • 1987 October, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, chapter 1, in A Flame in Byzantium, New York, N.Y.: Tor, →ISBN, part I (Belisarius), page 4:
      At Neapolis there was chaos as those who could flee Roma came to this port seeking escape.
    1. A metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy
    2. (historical) An ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire

Noun

Roma (plural Romas)

  1. A variety of tomato.

Etymology 3

Compare Indonesian Bahasa Romang (Roma language). This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. An Austronesian language of Indonesia.

Further reading

Anagrams

Albanian

Proper noun

Roma

  1. definite nominative singular of Romë

Azerbaijani

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Catalan

Etymology

Inherited from Latin Rōma.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Central Nahuatl

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Franco-Provençal

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Galician

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

German

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈroːma/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

Roma m pl

  1. plural of Rom
    • 2016 April 11, Caroline Kraft, quoting Gilda-Nancy Horvat, “Beleidigt, bespuckt”, in Zeit Online[1]:
      "Viele Roma positionieren sich zu Antiziganismus gar nicht, weil sie Angst haben. Sie outen sich nicht, egal, ob sie Manager, Anwälte oder Politiker sind. Der Gedanke, stolz darauf sein zu können, dass man Roma ist, erscheint immer noch absurd", meint Gilda-Nancy Horvath, selbst Romni und ORF-Journalistin.
      “Many a Rom does not take position in respect to antiziganism, by reason of fear. They don’t come out, no matter, whether they are managers, advocates or politicians. The thought of being proud about being a Rom, still appears absurd.”, opines Gilda-Nancy Horvath, herself Romni and ORF journalist.

Hawaiian

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Romans (book of the Bible)

Indonesian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈroma/
  • Rhymes: -ma, -a
  • Homophone: roma
  • Hyphenation: Ro‧ma

Etymology 1

From Italian Roma, from Latin Rōma.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome:
    1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
    2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
    3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)
    4. (metonymic) the Italian government
    5. the Holy See, the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church, particularly prior to the establishment of the Vatican City in the 19th century
    6. the Church of Rome, the Roman Catholic Church generally
  2. (biblical) Epistle to the Romans
Alternative forms
  • Rom (Standard Malay)

Etymology 2

Unknown (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Proper noun

Roma

  1. ethnic groups inhabiting Roma Island, Southeast Maluku Regency
    Synonyms: Ruma, Romang

Further reading

Italian

Etymology

Inherited from Latin Rōma.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈro.ma/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -oma
  • Hyphenation: Ró‧ma

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)
  4. Rome (a former province of Lazio, Italy)
  5. the letter R in the Italian spelling alphabet

Descendants

  • Burmese: ရောမ (rau:ma.)
  • Japanese: ローマ (Rōma) (perhaps via Portuguese Roma)
  • Korean: 로마 (roma)

Anagrams

Latin

Alternative forms

  • R (numismatic abbreviation)

Etymology

Uncertain.

  • Roman mythology derived the name from Rōmulus, name of the legendary founder and first king. This is almost certainly a folk etymology, and the name of the mythical figure is more likely derived from the city name.
  • The word may derive from *Roumon- or *Roumen-, an archaic name for the Tiber river that would be derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *srew- (to flow) (for which compare Ancient Greek ῥεῦμα (rheûma, river) and Στρῡμών (Strūmṓn, Strymon, Struma), Albanian rrymë (stream), Proto-Slavic *strumy (stream), Lithuanian stràuma (stream), and perhaps also Latin rūmen). If so, the intermediate source may have been an Indo-European substrate.
  • The word may be of Etruscan origin, as 𐌓𐌖𐌌𐌀 (ruma) was one of the Etruscan gentes, from 𐌓𐌖𐌌 (rum, teat). Given the lack of a secure Indo-European etymology for Rōma, this possibility is most appealing.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Rōma f sg (genitive Rōmae); first declension

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
    Ut Rōma iugum omnibus terrīs impōneret.
    That Rome might overcome all countries.
    Venit Rōmā.
    He came from Rome.
  2. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)
  3. (Late Latin) Rome and/or Constantinople (the latter as "Nova Roma")
  4. (Ecclesiastical Latin, poetic) The Roman Catholic Church in general
  5. (New Latin) Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)

Declension

First-declension noun, with locative, singular only.

singular
nominative Rōma
genitive Rōmae
dative Rōmae
accusative Rōmam
ablative Rōmā
vocative Rōma
locative Rōmae

Derived terms

Descendants

Borrowings
  • Ancient Greek: Ῥώμη (Rhṓmē)
    • Greek: Ρώμη (Rómi)
    • Arabic: رُومِية (rūmiya)
    • Aramaic: רומא
      • Classical Syriac: ܪܘܡܐ (Rōmāʾ, Rōmēʾ)
    • Old Armenian: Հռովմ (Hṙovm), Հռոմ (Hṙom)
    • Egyptian:



      (hrm)
    • Parthian: (/⁠Frōm⁠/)
      Inscriptional Parthian script: 𐭐𐭓𐭅𐭌 (prwm)
      Manichaean script: 𐫜𐫡𐫇𐫖 (frwm)
      • Sogdian: ("Rome, Byzantium")
        Manichaean script: 𐫂𐫡𐫀𐫇𐫖 (βrʾwm /⁠Frūm, Frōm⁠/)
        Sogdian script: 𐽃𐽀𐼴𐼺 (frwm /⁠Frūm⁠/)
      • Chinese: 拂菻 (Fúlǐn) (via Iranian)
    • Middle Persian: (/⁠Hrōm⁠/, Rome; Byzantine)
      Book Pahlavi script: [Book Pahlavi needed] (hlwm)
      Manichaean script: 𐫍𐫡𐫇𐫖 (hrwm)
      Pazend script: 𐬀𐬭𐬋𐬨 (arōm)
      Inscriptional Pahlavi script: 𐭧𐭫𐭥𐭬𐭩 (ḥlwmy), Middle Persian: 𐭧𐭫𐭥𐭬 (ḥlwm)
  • Arabic: روما (rūmā)
  • Proto-Celtic: *Rūmā (see there for further descendants)
    • Proto-Germanic: *Rūmō (see there for further descendants)
  • → Southern Common Slavic: *Rymъ
  • Mishnaic Hebrew: רומא
  • Middle Persian: [Term?] (/⁠Hrōmāyīg⁠/, Roman, Greek)
  • Old Irish: Róm (see there for further descendants)
  • Romanian: Roma

References

  • Roma”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • Roma”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers

Anagrams

Latvian

Etymology

From Latin Rōma (Rome).

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Lithuanian

Etymology

From Latin Rōma (Rome).

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Declension

Declension of Roma
nominative Roma
genitive Romos
dative Romai
accusative Romą
instrumental Roma
locative Romoje
vocative Roma

Maranao

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

References

Norwegian Bokmål

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Italian and Latin Roma.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Italian and Latin Roma.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Occitan

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Old Galician-Portuguese

Etymology

From Latin Rōma (Rome).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈro.ma/

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (the ancient capital of the Roman Empire; the capital city of the Papal States, in modern-day Italy)

Descendants

Old Spanish

Etymology

From Latin Rōma. Compare Old Galician-Portuguese Roma.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈroma/

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (the ancient capital of the Roman Empire; the capital city of the Papal States, in modern-day Italy)
    • c. 1200, Almerich, Fazienda de Ultramar, f. 79r:
      Sant peẏdro fo p̃dicar en roma. e por occaſiõ de ſimõ magus el encantador. nero el enꝑador fizolo meter en .+. dela cabeça aẏuſo e delos pies aſuſo.
      Saint Peter went to Rome to preach, and because of Simon Magus the sorcerer Nero the emperor had him put on a cross with his head down and his feet up.

Descendants

Portuguese

Etymology

Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese Roma, from Latin Rōma (Rome).

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈʁõ.mɐ/ [ˈhõ.mɐ]
    • (Rio de Janeiro) IPA(key): /ˈʁõ.mɐ/ [ˈχõ.mɐ]
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈʁo.ma/ [ˈho.ma]

  • Hyphenation: Ro‧ma

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)
  4. the Catholic Church (Christian church centred in the Vatican)
    Synonyms: Santa Sé, Vaticano, Igreja Católica

Anagrams

Romagnol

Alternative forms

Proper noun

Roma f (Faenza)

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin Rōma.

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Sardinian

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Sicilian

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Spanish

Etymology

Inherited from Old Spanish Roma, from Latin Rōma.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈroma/ [ˈro.ma]
  • Rhymes: -oma
  • Syllabification: Ro‧ma

Proper noun

Roma f

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)
    • 1915, Julio Vicuña Cifuentes, Mitos y Supersticiones Recogidos de la Tradición Oral Chilena, page 190:
      Los antiguos alcanzaban mayor longevidad, porque eran bautizados con óleos venidos directamente de Roma, que, por cierto, debían tener más virtud y eficacia que los nuestros.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Derived terms

Further reading

Anagrams

Swahili

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish روما (Roma), from Italian and Latin Roma. Doublet of Rum.

Proper noun

Roma

  1. Rome (a major city, the capital of Italy and the Italian region of Lazio, located on the Tiber River; the ancient capital of the Roman Empire)
  2. Rome (a metropolitan city of Lazio, Italy)
  3. (historical) Rome, Ancient Rome (an ancient empire based out of the city of Rome, covering vast territories in Europe, Asia and Africa; in full, Roman Empire)

Declension

Declension of Roma
singular plural
nominative Roma -
definite accusative Roma'yı -
dative Roma'ya -
locative Roma'da -
ablative Roma'dan -
genitive Roma'nın -

See also

  • Roma İmparatorluğu

References