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  1. Belarusian ( endonym: беларуская мова, romanized : bielaruskaja mova, pronounced [bʲɛɫaˈruskaja ˈmɔva]) is an East Slavic language. It is one of the two official languages in Belarus, alongside Russian. Additionally, it is spoken in some parts of Russia, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, and Ukraine by Belarusian minorities in those countries.

    • Gmina Hajnówka

      Gmina Hajnówka (Belarusian: Гміна Гайнаўка) is a rural gmina...

  2. The Belarusian language (беларуская мова, biełaruskaja mova) is an Eastern Slavic language and an Indo-European language. It is spoken in Belarus and eastern Poland (in the area of Białystok). It is also spoken by Belarusians who live in other countries of Europe, Australia, and North America.

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  4. Sudovian is believed to have gone extinct around the 17th century. At present, Belarusian and Russian are considered the sole native languages of Belarus, as seen below. The language situation in Belarus is characterized by a co-existence of several linguistic codes.

  5. As of October 2023, the most popular editions of Wikipedia within Belarus are the Russian Wikipedia (with 88.0% of all page views) followed by the English Wikipedia (9.1%). The Belarusian Wikipedia has much fewer page views in comparison, making up 1.2% of Wikipedia requests from Belarus.

  6. Spoken in: Belarus, Poland, Czech Republic, Ukraine, Lithuania, Russia, Canada, USA, Israel. First written: 13th century AD. Writing system: Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. Status: official language in Belarus and parts of Poland. Recognised as a minority language in the Czech Republic, Ukraine and Lithuania.

  7. The grammar of the Belarusian language is mostly synthetic and partly analytic, and norms of the modern language were adopted in 1959. Belarusian orthography is mainly based on the Belarusian folk dialects of the Minsk - Vilnius region, such as they were at the beginning of the 20th century. Initially, Belarusian grammar was formalised by ...

  8. Belarusian Wikipedia. There are two Belarusian Wikipedias: one in the orthography of the Belarusian language which is official in modern Belarus ( Narkomovka, prefix "be:"), and another one in the pre-reform of 1933, classical orthography ( Taraškievica, prefix "be-x-old:").

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