s sa sb sc sd se sf sg sh si sj sk sl sm sn so sp sq sr ss st su sv sw sy

Перевод: Slav speek Slav


[прилагательное]
славянский;
[существительное]
славянин ; славянка


Тезаурус:

  1. It was occupied by Slav tribes in the ninth and tenth centuries, and it was near the heart of the Serbian Empire of Stevan Duan in the fourteenth century.
  2. Alice Masaryk, with whom Plenik worked on much of the castle, was fond of reflecting that Slovakia was the Greece of the Slav nation.
  3. (He is pivotal in other ways too, not least culturally, with Austrian roots and Slav and Mediterranean forebears.)
  4. By 1928 the Kaszubes numbered around 110,000, and they and the few thousand speakers of Leban dialect were the last survivors of the original Slav settlers of Pomerania.
  5. A seaman was leaning on the bridge rail, his bland Slav face scrutinising the resting dockers.
  6. This furthered his long-term ambition to rule a large "south Slav" kingdom when the Ottoman Empire finally collapsed.
  7. The Maniots, who trace descent from them, boast of never having been subdued by Slav or Turk.
  8. Even if the Prussian Colonisation Commission had failed to drive the Poles out entirely, many of the old Slav survivors of the original settlement of Pomerania had been drawn into the German language orbit.
  9. Throughout the Prussian east a wide range of specifically Polish cultural organisations sprang up in response to this pressure: the Slav Literary Society (1836), the Wroclaw Flute Choral Society (1890), the Soko Physical Culture Society (1894), and the Association of Polish Boy Scouts in Germany (1912).
  10. They speak a Polabian dialect of the Pomeranian group of Slav languages, closely related to Wendish (Sorbian), Serbian and the vanished Slovincian dialect, all of which are/were related to Polish.
  11. They stressed German title to the lands of Pomerania, Silesia and central Poland, saying that German settlement had predated Slav settlement.
  12. In 1750, although Pomeranian Supsk had already become German Stolp, it had been possible to say that east of a line drawn from the tiny Pomeranian fishing hamlet of Rowy to the hamlet of Tuchomie, Polish or various Slav dialects were spoken.
  13. One was the need for reassurance in a world of visibly consolidating Great Powers - from the United States in the West to the Teutonic and Slav empires in Europe and the East.

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