Turkmen to Serbian Translation
Common Phrases From Turkmen to Serbian
Turkmen | Serbian |
---|---|
Sagbol | Хвала вам |
Haýyş edýärin | Молимо вас |
Bagyşlaň | Извињавам се |
Salam | Здраво |
Hoş gal | збогом |
Hawa | да |
.Ok | Не |
Ýagdaýlaryňyz nähili? | Како си? |
Bagyşlaň meni | Извините |
Bilmedim | Не знам |
men düşündim | разумем |
Men şeýle pikir edýärin | Мислим да је тако |
Belki | Можда |
Soň görüşeris | Видимо се касније |
Seresap bol | Брини се |
Näme boldy? | Шта има? |
Hiç wagt pikir etme | Нема везе |
Elbetde | Наравно |
Derrew | Одмах |
Gideli | Идемо |
Interesting information about Turkmen Language
Turkmen is a Turkic language primarily spoken in Turkmenistan, where it holds the status of official language. It also has significant communities of speakers in Iran and Afghanistan. With approximately 7 million native speakers worldwide, it belongs to the southwestern branch of the Turkic languages family tree. The script used for writing Turkmen underwent several changes throughout history; initially written with Arabic script until Soviet influence introduced Latin-based orthography during the early 20th century. However, by mid-century Cyrillic became dominant due to political reasons but switched back to Latin after independence from USSR. Linguistically, Turkmen shares similarities with other Central Asian languages such as Uzbek and Kazakh while being more distantly related to Turkish or Azerbaijani. Its vocabulary exhibits influences from Persian and Russian due to historical interactions between these cultures.
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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