romanic in English

adjective

[Ro·man·ic || rəʊ'mænɪk]

Roman, pertaining to the Romans; pertaining to the Romance languages, pertaining to the family of languages derived from Lati

Use "romanic" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "romanic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "romanic", or refer to the context using the word "romanic" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Sibillini mountains, Romanic Churches, medioeval castles, amphitheatres revive the countryside, while concerts and operas provide exciting evening entertainment.

2. Bush itself is a thicket of Scandinavian (Old Norse Buskr), Germanic (Old High German busc), and Romanic (Medieval Latin busca) influences and cognates

3. Hello good Anglish learners, I am hereby once again to present you all this list with good substitutes for all the body parts that are romanic, they are mainly germanic, but the few ones that were romanic I elaborated options for them, send your comments and suggestions over this

4. "armorial bearings, coat of arms," late 13c., from Old French blason (12c.) "a shield, Blazon," also "collar bone;" common Romanic (compare Spanish blason, Italian blasone, Portuguese brasao, Provençal blezo, the first two said to be French loan-words) but of uncertain origin

5. Bung (n.) mid-15c., "large stopper for a cask," of uncertain origin, perhaps from Middle Dutch bonge "stopper;" or perhaps from French bonde "Bung, Bunghole" (15c.), which may be of Germanic origin (or the Germanic words may be borrowed from Romanic), or it may be from Gaulish *bunda (compare Old Irish bonn, Gaelic bonn, Welsh bon "base, sole of the foot").