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  1. The Serbian Wikipedia ( Serbian: Википедија на српском језику, Vikipedija na srpskom jeziku) is the Serbian-language version of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Created on 16 February 2003, it reached its 100,000th article on 20 November 2009 before getting to another milestone with the 200,000th article on 6 ...

    • Serbia

      Serbia is a parliamentary republic, with the government...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SerbiaSerbia - Wikipedia

    Serbia is a parliamentary republic, with the government divided into legislative, executive, and judiciary branches. The current constitution was adopted in 2006 in the aftermath of the Montenegro independence referendum. [ 206] The Constitutional Court rules on matters regarding the Constitution .

  3. sr.wikipedia.org › wiki › Главна_странаВикипедија

    Опсада Скадра (1912—1913) Опсада Скадра . Опсада Скадра (тур. İşkodra Kuşatması, алб. Rrethimi i Shkodrës) била је битка у Првом балканском рату у којој је Војска Краљевине Црне Горе, након неколико неуспјешних покушаја и уз помоћ Војске ...

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    • Grammar
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    • Serbian Literature
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    Serbian is a standardized variety of Serbo-Croatian, a Slavic language (Indo-European), of the South Slavic subgroup. Other standardized forms of Serbo-Croatian are Bosnian, Croatian, and Montenegrin. "An examination of all the major 'levels' of language shows that BCS is clearly a single language with a single grammatical system." It has lower int...

    Figures of speakers according to countries: 1. Serbia: 6,540,699 (official language) 2. Bosnia and Herzegovina: 1,086,027(co-official language) 3. Germany: 568,240[citation needed] 4. Austria: 350,000[citation needed] 5. Montenegro: 265,890 (language in official use) 6. Switzerland: 186,000 7. United States: 172,874 8. Sweden: 120,000 9. Italy: 106...

    Standard Serbian language uses both Cyrillic (ћирилица, ćirilica) and Latin script (latinica, латиница). Serbian is a rare example of synchronic digraphia, a situation where all literate members of a society have two interchangeable writing systems available to them. Media and publishers typically select one alphabet or the other. In general, the a...

    Serbian is a highly inflected language, with grammatical morphology for nouns, pronouns and adjectives as well as verbs.

    Most Serbian words are of native Slavic lexical stock, tracing back to the Proto-Slavic language. There are many loanwordsfrom different languages, reflecting cultural interaction throughout history. Notable loanwords were borrowed from Greek, Latin, Italian, Turkish, Hungarian, English, Russian, German, Czech and French.

    Serbian literature emerged in the Middle Ages, and included such works as Miroslavljevo jevanđelje (Miroslav's Gospel) in 1186 and Dušanov zakonik (Dušan's Code) in 1349. Little secular medieval literature has been preserved, but what there is shows that it was in accord with its time; for example, the Serbian Alexandride, a book about Alexander th...

    The dialects of Serbo-Croatian, regarded Serbian (traditionally spoken in Serbia), include: 1. Šumadija–Vojvodina(Ekavian, Neo-Shtokavian): central and northern Serbia 2. Eastern Herzegovinian(Ijekavian, Neo-Shtokavian): southwestern Serbia, western half of Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia 3. Kosovo–Resava(Ekavian, Old-Shtokavian): easte...

    Vuk Karadžić's Srpski rječnik, first published in 1818, is the earliest dictionary of modern literary Serbian. The Rječnik hrvatskoga ili srpskoga jezika (I–XXIII), published by the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts from 1880 to 1976, is the only general historical dictionary of Serbo-Croatian. Its first editor was Đuro Daničić, followed by Per...

    Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Serbian, written in the Cyrillic script: Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Serbian, written in the Latin alphabet: Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rightsin English:

    Swadesh list of basic vocabulary words (from Wiktionary's Appendix:Swadesh lists)
    Standard language as an instrument of culture and the product of national history – an article by linguist Pavle Ivić at Project Rastko
    A Basic Serbian Phrasebook Archived 2008-12-29 at the Wayback Machine
  4. 1 day ago · Serbia, country in the west-central Balkans. For most of the 20th century, it was a part of Yugoslavia. The capital of Serbia is Belgrade, a cosmopolitan city at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers. Serbia’s second city, Novi Sad, a cultural and educational center, lies upstream on the Danube.

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  5. Према званичној историографији назив Србија се први пут помиње код Грка средином 10. века, и то најпре као Σερβλία ( Сервлија, Серблија ), а затим и Σερβια ( Сервија, Сербија ), што значи земља ...

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  7. The Serbian Wikipedia is the Serbian-language edition of Wikipedia. This version was started on February 16, 2003. It is the 28th largest edition. [1] It has over 325,000 articles. [2]

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