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Rom
[rōm]
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NOUN
Rom (noun) · Roma (plural noun)
a member of the Roma people; a Romani person.
ORIGIN
mid 19th century: Romani, ‘man, husband’, probably from Sanskrit ḍomba ‘wandering musician’, but also influenced by Byzantine Greek Rōmaios ‘Roman, citizen of Byzantine empire’, since the Roma formed into a distinct ethnic group within the Byzantine Empire.
ROM
[räm]
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ABBREVIATION
computing
read-only memory.
rom.
[rom.]
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ABBREVIATION
roman (used as an instruction for a typesetter).
Rom.
[Rom.]
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ABBREVIATION
Epistle to the Romans (in biblical references).
read-on·ly mem·o·ry
[ˌrēdˌōnlē ˈmem(ə)rē]
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NOUN
ROM (noun)
memory read at high speed but not capable of being changed by program instructions.
Romani (/ ˈ r ɒ m ə n i, ˈ r oʊ-/; also Romany, Romanes / ˈ r ɒ m ə n ɪ s /, Roma, Gypsy; Romani: rromani ćhib) is an Indo-Aryan macrolanguage of the Romani communities. According to Ethnologue , seven varieties of Romani are divergent enough to be considered languages of …
Roma, singular Rom, also called Romany or Gypsies (considered pejorative), an ethnic group of traditionally itinerant people who originated in northern India but live in modern times …
Here are some of the most commonly used words and phrases which have derived from Gypsy language, as well as the meanings behind them... 1. Bar What we know as that delightful …
In the Romani language, Rom is a masculine noun, meaning 'husband of the Roma ethnic group', with the plural Roma. The feminine of Rom in the Romani language is Romni …
It actually derives from the Romany term 'loli phabai' which means red apple. Traditionally, Romany Gypsies used to sell candied apples on a stick. Mullered Most often used these days …
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Gypsy noun Gyp· sy ˈjip-sē plural Gypsies 1 sometimes offensive : one of a people coming originally from India to Europe in the 14th or 15th century and living and maintaining a …
One of many catchphrases popularised by Derek 'Del Boy' Trotter in Only Fools and Horses, the term cushty actually comes from Romany word ‘kushitipen’ or ‘kushti’ and literally means ‘very...
In fact, many of the words and phrases that are a common part of the English language actually have their roots from the Gypsy and Traveller community. Figures from the 2011 census …
nark ( wikt:nark) – a police informer (from nāk "nose") pal ( wikt:pal) – friend (from phral "brother") posh ( wikt:posh) – fancy, upper-class (possibly from a Romani term for money) Romanipen – …