The Moravian Wallachian dialect is a Czech dialect native to Moravian Wallachia, influenced by standard Czech and Slovak, which includes Romanian words from Daco-Romanian such as baÃÂa "shepherd", brynza "cheese", domikát "type of dairy", grapa "steep mountain meadow", pirà ¥a "path for sheep", kurnota "horned sheep", koà ¡Ã¡r "fence for sheep", kozub "fireplace", kyrdel "flock", murgaà Âa/murgaà ¡a "dark-wooled sheep", putira/putyra "little", strunga/strunka "garden gate", watra "fire", or à ¾inÃÂica "sheep whey".
For the above reasons Czech specialists hypothize that groups of Romanian shepherds from present-day Romania (Transylvania, Banat) or present-day eastern Serbia, settled in East Moravia at the latest in the 15thâÂÂ17th centuries.
In the local dialect the forest-mountain-refuge was known as hora. The influence expanded to toponymy as well with words such as: magura - distinctive round-shaped hill, kyÃÂera, grÃºà  - deforested mountain ridge for pasture, polonina or polana - âÂÂalpineâ pasture.