<Li> Hungarian: a cheltui <költeni "to spend", a făgădui <fogadni "to promise", a mântui <menteni "to save", oraș <város "city"; </Li> <Li> Turkish: papuc <pabuç "slipper", ciorbă <çorba "wholemeal soup, sour soup", bacșiș <bahşiş "tip" (ultimately from Persian baksheesh); </Li> <Li> German: cartof <Kartoffel "potato", bere <Bier "beer", șurub <Schraube "screw", turn <Turm "tower", ramă <Rahmen "frame", muștiuc <Mundstück "mouth piece", bormașină <Bohrmaschine "drilling machine", cremșnit <Kremschnitte "cream slice", șvaițer <Schweizer "Swiss cheese", șlep <Schleppkahn "barge", șpriț <Spritzer "wine with soda water", abțibild <Abziehbild "decal picture", șnițel <Schnitzel "cutlet", șuncă <dialectal Schunke (Schinken) "ham", punct <Punkt "point", maistru <Meister "master", rundă <Runde "round". During the Austrian administration in Banat, Transylvania, and Bukovina, a large number of words were borrowed from Austrian German, in particular in fields such as the military, administration, social welfare, economy, etc . Later on German terms have been taken out of science and technics, like: șină <Schiene "rail", știft <Stift "peg", liță <Litze "braid", șindrilă <Schindel "shingle", ștanță <Stanze "punch", șaibă <Scheibe "washer", ștangă <Stange "crossbar", țiglă <Ziegel "tile", șmirghel <Schmirgelpapier "emery paper"; </Li> <Li> The Romani language has provided a series of words to Romanian, especially slang terms: mișto "good, beautiful, cool" <mišto, gagică "girlie, girlfriend" <gadji, a hali "to devour" <halo, mandea "yours truly" <mande, a mangli "to pilfer" <manglo . </Li>

How many words does the romanian language have