In March 2011, the Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited Slovenia and met with the Slovenian Prime Minister Borut Pahor and the President of Slovenia Danilo Türk. The Russian and Slovenian delegations discussed economic, scientific and cultural partnership, especially regarding the construction of the South Stream pipeline.
Slovene or Slovenian belongs to the group of South Slavic languages. It is spoken by approximately 2.5 million speakers worldwide, the majority of whom live in Slovenia. It is the first language of about 2.1 million Slovenian people and is one of the 24 official and working languages of the European Union.
Apr 23, 2013 · The Russian words in the first column (words in red) are impossible to guess (except some such as "красивый" and "друг") for a Slovene speaker, while the Slovene word could be guessed by the Russian speaker, thanks to the similarities between the Russian words in the second column and the Slovene words.
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers a four-quarter accelerated sequence that covers first- and second-year Slovene. In addition, the department offers an undergraduate major in Eastern European Languages, Literature and Culture, and a in Slavic Languages, as well as a in Russian and Slavic Literatures.
DENIS m French, Russian, English, German, Czech, Slovak, Slovene, Romanian, Croatian From Denys or Denis , the medieval French forms of DIONYSIUS . Saint Denis was a 3rd-century missionary to Gaul and the first bishop of Paris.
Jul 15, 2007 · Russian (along with Ukrainian and Byelorussian) is an Eastern Slavic language; Bulgarian shares the Southern Slavic subdivision with the Macedonian, Serbo-Croatian, and Slovenian languages, with about the same degree of similarity to Russian as there is between English and German (both Germanic languages).
No Slovenia is a part of central Europe and it`s neighbours are Italy, Croatia, Austria and Hungary.Allthough it was a part of the former Yugoslavia and therefore considered a …
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Russian. Russian has the same number of cases like Slovenian. The difference is just that in Slovenian we use the locative and instrumental with prepositions, but in Russian the prepositions are usually used only in instrumental, which is the 5th case in Russian, and …