Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Srpski Krstur ( Serbian Cyrillic: Српски Крстур) is a village located in Serbia, in the Novi Kneževac municipality of the North Banat District, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina. The village has a Serb ethnic majority (69.81%) with a present Romani (13.58%) and Hungarian minority (9.38%). It has a population of 1,620 people ...

  2. Education in Serbia. 4.8% of GDP (2011) [1] – 82nd ranking of government expenditure on education worldwide. [2] Education in Serbia is divided into preschool ( predškolsko ), primary school ( osnovna škola ), secondary school ( srednja škola) and higher education levels. It is regulated by the Ministry of Education, Science and ...

  3. The Second Serbian Uprising ( Serbian: Други српски устанак / Drugi srpski ustanak, Turkish: İkinci Sırp Ayaklanması) was the second phase of the Serbian Revolution against the Ottoman Empire, which erupted shortly after the re-annexation of the country to the Ottoman Empire in 1813. The occupation was enforced following ...

  4. Serbian Citation Index. Serbian Citation Index ( Serbian: Srpski citatni indeks; SCIndeks) is a combination of an online multidisciplinary bibliographic database, a national citation index, an Open Access full-text journal repository and an electronic publishing platform. [2] It is produced and maintained by the Centre for Evaluation in ...

  5. The dinar ( Serbian Cyrillic: динар, pronounced [dînaːr]; paucal: dinara / динара; abbreviation: DIN ( Latin) and дин ( Cyrillic ); code: RSD) is the currency of Serbia. The dinar was first used in Serbia in medieval times, its earliest use dating back to 1214. The dinar was reintroduced as the official Serbian currency by ...

  6. Front page of the Vuk Stefanović Karadžić's translation of the New Testament, 1847. Bible translations into Serbian started to appear in fragments in the 11th century. Efforts to make a complete translation started in the 16th century. The first published complete translations were made in the 19th century.

  7. Most dialects of Serbia and Montenegro originally lack the phoneme /x/, instead having /j/, /v/, or nothing (silence). /x/ was introduced with language unification, and the Serbian and Montenegrin standards allow for some doublets such as snaja–snaha and hajde–ajde. However, in other words, especially those of foreign origin, h is mandatory.

  1. People also search for