Slovenian to Serbian Translation
Common Phrases From Slovenian to Serbian
Slovenian | Serbian |
---|---|
Hvala vam | Хвала вам |
prosim | Молимо вас |
oprosti | Извињавам се |
zdravo | Здраво |
Adijo | збогом |
ja | да |
št | Не |
kako si | Како си? |
Oprostite | Извините |
Nevem | Не знам |
razumem | разумем |
Mislim, da | Мислим да је тако |
mogoče | Можда |
Se vidimo kasneje | Видимо се касније |
pazi nase | Брини се |
Kaj se dogaja? | Шта има? |
Pozabi | Нема везе |
Seveda | Наравно |
Takoj | Одмах |
Pojdimo | Идемо |
Interesting information about Slovenian Language
Slovenian is the official language of Slovenia, spoken by approximately 2.5 million people worldwide. It belongs to the South Slavic branch of languages and shares similarities with Croatian and Serbian. Slovenian has a rich literary tradition dating back to the 16th century, when Primož Trubar published the first books in this language. The grammar features three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) and six cases (nominative, accusative/genitive/dative/locative for singular nouns; nominative/vocative/accusativ e/genitive/dati ve/instrumental/l ocational for plural). The alphabet consists of 25 letters including diacritic marks such as č, š,and ž. Despite being geographically small compared to neighboring countries like Italy or Austria where other widely-spoken languages are prevalent due to historical influences on border regions—such as Italian in coastal areas—the majority speaks Slovenian throughout all parts within its borders today
Know About Serbian Language
Serbian is a South Slavic language primarily spoken in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Croatia, and other Balkan countries. It belongs to the Indo-European language family and uses the Cyrillic script as its official alphabet (although Latin script is also used). Serbian has around 12 million native speakers worldwide. The grammar of Serbian includes three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter), seven cases for nouns/pronouns/adjectives (nominative genitive dative accusative vocative instrumental locative), two numbers (singular/plural) with complex declension patterns. The phonology involves consonant clusters at word boundaries but lacks palatalization found in some neighboring languages like Russian or Polish. Lexically influenced by various cultures throughout history including Byzantine Greek influence during medieval times; Turkish loanwords from Ottoman Empire rule; Germanic influences through Austro-Hungarian administration; French vocabulary due to cultural connections etc., making it richly diverse linguistically.
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