Sinti Gypsy New Testament and Portions from the Old Testament / O Debleskro Drom / Sinta, Sinte, Romani People of Central Europe / German Romani Dialect / Germany
Product Description
Sinti Gypsy New Testament and Portions from the Old Testament / O Debleskro Drom / Sinta, Sinte, Romani People of Central Europe / German Romani Dialect / Germany
John 3:16 Johanni
O Dewel kamas i menshen jaake bud, te das lo lenge peskro tchawes. Hakeno, koon patsell ap leste, djal gar nashedo. Job lell ko djipen, hoi gar pre-herella.
- Language: Roma / Sinti
- Title: O Debleskro drom
- Publisher: Romanes-Arbeit Marburg e.V.
- ISBN:
- Description of article: Hardcover - plastic – 801p. – 155x215x23mm – 640gr.
- Contents summary: New Testament and Old Testament excerpts (previously translated books; supplemented in later editions): Gen, Ex, Num 1-24, Joshua 1-11, Judges 1-9, Ruth, Ps 1-52
FREE DOWNLOAD HERE: http://www.romanibibla.com/o-tchinlo-lab/index.html
The Sinti (also Sinta or Sinte; masc. sing. Sinto; fem. sing. Sintesa) are a Romani people of Central Europe. They were traditionally itinerant, but today only a small percentage of the group remains unsettled. In earlier times, they frequently lived on the outskirts of communities. The Sinti of Central Europe are closely related to the group known as Manouche in France. They speak the Sinti-Manouche variety of Romani, which exhibits strong German influence.
"Sinti" may be derived from "Sindhi", the name of a people of the Sindh region in India as the original Gypsies migrated from India according to a recent Estonian and Indian study, a notion popular among the Sinti themselves, although the vast majority of scholars and anthropologists have claimed that there is no known basis for the comparison.
![]() Romani flag created in 1933 and accepted by the 1971 World Romani Congress
|
|
Total population | |
---|---|
2–20 million[1][2][3][4] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
![]() |
1,000,000 estimated with Romani ancestry (5,400 per 2000 census)[5][6] |
![]() |
800,000[7] |
![]() |
700,000–5,000,000[8][9][10] |
![]() |
650,000–1,500,000[8][11][12][13] |
![]() |
621,573–2,000,000[8][14][15] |
![]() |
350,000–500,000[16][17] |
![]() |
325,343–800,000[18][19] |
![]() |
315,583–990,000[20][21] |
![]() |
300,000–350,000[22] |
![]() |
90,000–225,000[8][23] |
![]() |
182,766–1,200,000[8][24] |
![]() |
147,604–500,000[25][26] |
![]() |
100,000–110,000[27] |
![]() |
120,000–180,000[28] |
![]() |
120,000–140,000[8][29] |
![]() |
105,738–600,000[8][30][31] |
![]() |
53,879[8][32] |
![]() |
50,000–100,000[33] |
![]() |
47,587–400,000[8][34] |
![]() |
40,370 (Romani speakers)[35]–300,000[36] |
![]() |
c. 300,000[37] |
![]() |
40,000–70,000[8][38] |
![]() |
40,000[39] |
![]() |
32,000–48,000[8] |
![]() |
15,000–60,000[8][40] |
![]() |
12,778–200,000[8][41] |
![]() |
16,975–40,000[8][42] |
![]() |
8,864–60,000[8][43] |
![]() |
8,301–150,000[8][38][44] |
![]() |
6,100[45] |
![]() |
5,255–80,000[46][47] |
![]() |
11,000–50,000 |
![]() |
5,000–25,000[48] |
![]() |
15,850[49] |
![]() |
16,000[citation needed] |
![]() |
c. 8,000[37] |
![]() |
9,200[50] |
![]() |
2,300[51] |
![]() |
<3,000[52] |
Languages | |
Romani language, Para-Romani varieties, languages of native regions | |
Religion | |
Of the religious predominantly Christianity[53] Islam[53] Shaktism branch of Hinduism[53] |
|
Related ethnic groups | |
Dom, Lom, Domba; other Indo-Aryans |