- en.wikipedia.org Romani peopleNot to be confused with Romanians or Romans. For other uses, see Romani (disambiguation). "Gypsy", "Gypsies", "Gipsy", and "Gipsies" redirect here.
- Gypsies were known for their skill as metalworkers, tinsmiths, woodworkers, carpenters, blacksmiths, horse traders and trainers, and in associated occupations.
- medium.com @rohithamruthur/gypsies-a-brief-…However, you may know them by their more colloquial name, gypsies. For many, the word “gypsies” conjures up specific images and characteristics.
- tureng.com tr/turkce-ingilizce/gypsyKelime ve terimleri çevir ve farklı aksanlarda sesli dinleme. gypsy çingene gypsy dancing çingene dansı gypsy roman gypsy chief ne demek.
- urbandictionary.com define.php…The largest population of Gypsies now lives in Eastern Europe, however communities of Gypsies can be found in many countries around the world.
- anthropology.iresearchnet.com gypsies/They tend to live simultaneously in two different worlds: the exterior imposed non-Gypsy world and the internal constructed Gypsy world.
- owlcation.com humanities/The-GypsiesGypsy history remained unknown for centuries, largely because they had no written language, and strangely enough, they had forgotten where they came from.
- publicpeople.org who-are-gypsies.htmThey called them "gypcian," a shortened form of the Middle English "Egypcien," as a result, and eventually this became the modern word "gypsy."
- crosswalk.com Who Are the Gypsies and What Do They Believe?Who are the Gypsies and what do they believe? The term "gypsies" refers to an ethnic group of people called the Roma or the Romani (also spelled Romany).
- occult-world.com gypsies/They came as Christian penitents and claimed to be exiles from a land called “Little Egypt.” Europeans called them “Egyptians,” which became corrupted as “Gypsies.”