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Topics referred to by the same term
Bucsum is the Hungarian name for three villages in Romania: Bucium village, Șinca Commune, Braşov County Bucium village, Orăştioara de Sus Commune, Hunedoara
Bucsum
Commune in Alba, Romania
Bucium-Sat (Bucsum-Szát), Cerbu (Bucsum-Cserbu), Ciuculești, Coleșeni, Dogărești, Ferești, Florești, Gura Izbitei, Helești, Izbicioara, Izbita (Bucsum-Izbita)
Bucium,_Alba
Béla Bartók suite of six piano pieces (1915)
Eastern instruments, such as the flute. Bucsumí tánc / Buciumeana (Dance from Bucsum) The fourth dance came from Bucsony, Alsó-Fehér County (today Bucium, Alba
Romanian_Folk_Dances
Commune in Hunedoara, Romania
County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of eight villages: Bucium (Bucsum), Costești (Kosztesd), Costești-Deal, Grădiștea de Munte (Gredistye), Ludeștii
Orăștioara_de_Sus
Commune in Hunedoara, Romania
villages: Balomir (Balomir), Bărăștii Hațegului (Baresd), Bucium-Orlea (Bucsum), Ciopeia (Csopea), Săcel (Szacsal), Sânpetru (Szentpéterfalva), Sântămăria-Orlea
Sântămăria-Orlea
Commune in Brașov, Romania
County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of six villages: Bucium (Bucsum), Ohaba (Ohába), Perșani (Persány), Șercăița (Sarkaica), Șinca Veche (the
Șinca
Group of Romanian nobles in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary
diplomas, in some cases confirming "their old boyar rights". Residents of Bucsum, Also Uczya (Alsóucsa/Ucea de Sus), Also Venechia (Veneția de Jos), Dragos
Boyars_of_Fogaras
World War I battle
Germans pursued the Romanians as they retreated, reaching the eastern end of Bucsum (Bucium). There, a German artillery battery was ordered to fire on the railway
Battle_of_Báránykút
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Girl/Female
Indian
Type of flower
Boy/Male
Tamil
Son of world
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Friend of the Gods
Girl/Female
Indian, Telugu
Drum
Boy/Male
Hindu
(Wife of Lord Shiva (Rudra))
Boy/Male
Egyptian
Pepper.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : term of status for someone who was born a free man (from Old English frēo ‘free’ + boren ‘born’), rather than a serf emancipated in late life. Compare Freedman.
Surname or Lastname
Turkish
Turkish : occupational name from asker ‘soldier’, from Arabic ‛askarī. This name is also found in Iran and the Indian subcontinent.Arabic : variant of Asghar.Greek : shortened form of Askeris, from Turkish asker ‘soldier’, or from Askeridis or Askeropoulos, patronymics from this word. Compare Laskaris.Norwegian and Swedish : habitational name from any of several farmsteads named Asker, in particular those near Oslo, from an inflected form of ask ‘ash tree’.English (Norfolk) : topographic name for someone who lived by an ash tree, Middle English ask (from Old Norse asker) + the habitational suffix -er.English : from Middle English asker(e) ‘collector of tolls or revenues’ or (in a legal context) ‘plaintiff’ or ‘prosecutor’ (an agent derivative of Middle English aske(n) ‘to ask’, ‘to demand’).
Boy/Male
Australian, Danish, Greek
Farmer
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Tart.
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