Romanian Words and Phrases - -E Ti (Placename Element), Albu (Surname), Babe, Balaur, C PC Un, Chirpici, Cioban, Clucer, Conduc Tor, Decre Ei, Domnitor, Ispravnic, L Utari, Linguistic Issues Concerning the Euro (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: -e ti (placename element), Albu (surname), Babe, Balaur, C pc un, Chirpici, Cioban, Clucer, Conduc tor, Decre ei, Domnitor, Ispravnic, L utari, Linguistic issues concerning the euro, List of Romanian words of possible Dacian origin, Manea, Minea, Mujdei, Postelnic, Sanzian, Seimeni, Sluger, Stolnic, Sudi i, Targ, Uria, Ursari, Valv, Vantoase, Vornic, Zmeu, Zongora. Excerpt: Several linguistic issues have arisen in relation to the spelling of the words euro and cent in the many languages of the member states of the European Union, as well as in relation to grammar and the formation of plurals. In official documents, the name "euro" must be used for the nominative singular in all languages, though different alphabets are taken into account and plural forms and declensions are accepted. In documents other than EU legal texts, including national legislation, other spellings are accepted according to the various grammatical rules of the respective language. For European Union legislation, the spelling of the words for the currency is prescribed for each language; in the English-language version of European Union legislation the forms "euro" and "cent" are used invariantly in the singular and plural, even though this departs from usual English practice for currencies. The language is an official language in a eurozone member state, meaning there are official spellings in EU documents. Partitive singular. Most languages use a plural or immutable singular with numbers, but Estonian and Finnish use the partitive case. Breton follows numerals with the singular form of the noun. English, Turkish and Swedish are marked by the euro sign because they are official languages of eurozone members (English being the official language in Malta and Ireland, Turkish in Cyprus, and Swedish in Finland), despite the fact that Turkish is not an official language of the European Union and that neither Sweden nor the United Kingdom use the euro. Numerals follow their nouns in Volapuk. Welsh follows numerals with the singular form of the noun. In Asturian, there has been a controversy about the spelling of the word. The official academic dictionary uses the spelling euru, respecting the Asturian tendency to write nouns with a final -u. However, considering that the international use is euro and that there is a tendency in Asturian to write some short forms with a

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: -e ti (placename element), Albu (surname), Babe, Balaur, C pc un, Chirpici, Cioban, Clucer, Conduc tor, Decre ei, Domnitor, Ispravnic, L utari, Linguistic issues concerning the euro, List of Romanian words of possible Dacian origin, Manea, Minea, Mujdei, Postelnic, Sanzian, Seimeni, Sluger, Stolnic, Sudi i, Targ, Uria, Ursari, Valv, Vantoase, Vornic, Zmeu, Zongora. Excerpt: Several linguistic issues have arisen in relation to the spelling of the words euro and cent in the many languages of the member states of the European Union, as well as in relation to grammar and the formation of plurals. In official documents, the name "euro" must be used for the nominative singular in all languages, though different alphabets are taken into account and plural forms and declensions are accepted. In documents other than EU legal texts, including national legislation, other spellings are accepted according to the various grammatical rules of the respective language. For European Union legislation, the spelling of the words for the currency is prescribed for each language; in the English-language version of European Union legislation the forms "euro" and "cent" are used invariantly in the singular and plural, even though this departs from usual English practice for currencies. The language is an official language in a eurozone member state, meaning there are official spellings in EU documents. Partitive singular. Most languages use a plural or immutable singular with numbers, but Estonian and Finnish use the partitive case. Breton follows numerals with the singular form of the noun. English, Turkish and Swedish are marked by the euro sign because they are official languages of eurozone members (English being the official language in Malta and Ireland, Turkish in Cyprus, and Swedish in Finland), despite the fact that Turkish is not an official language of the European Union and that neither Sweden nor the United Kingdom use the euro. Numerals follow their nouns in Volapuk. Welsh follows numerals with the singular form of the noun. In Asturian, there has been a controversy about the spelling of the word. The official academic dictionary uses the spelling euru, respecting the Asturian tendency to write nouns with a final -u. However, considering that the international use is euro and that there is a tendency in Asturian to write some short forms with a

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

December 2012

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

December 2012

Authors

Editors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 1mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

26

ISBN-13

978-1-157-71387-6

Barcode

9781157713876

Categories

LSN

1-157-71387-4



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