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About Сергей

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So far Сергей has created 82 blog entries.

ARMENIAN

2020-05-17T13:05:11+00:00

Armenian is an Indo-European language with about 6 million speakers mainly in Armenia (Հայաստան [Hayastan]) and Nagorno-Karabakh, a de facto, though unrecognized, independent republic in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the South Caucasus. There are also Armenian speakers in many other countries, including Russia, Georgia, Lebanon, Iran, Syria, Turkey, Egypt and the USA. Armenian is

ARMENIAN2020-05-17T13:05:11+00:00

AZERBAIJANI

2020-05-17T13:05:23+00:00

Azerbaijani is a member of the Western Oghuz branch of the Turkic language family spoken by about 32.2 million people mainly in Azerbaijan, Iran, Georgia, Russia and Turkey, and also in Iraq, Syria and Turkmenistan. There are two main varieties of the language: North Azerbaijani and South Azerbaijani, which are sometimes classified as separate

AZERBAIJANI2020-05-17T13:05:23+00:00

GEORGIAN

2021-04-15T11:00:54+00:00

Georgian is a South Caucasian or Kartvelian language spoken by about 4.1 million people mainly in Georgia, and also in Russia, Ukraine, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Iran. Georgian is related to Mingrelian (მარგალური ნინა), Laz (ლაზური ნენა), and Svan(ლუშნუ ნინ), all of which are spoken mainly in Georgia and are written with the Georgian (Mkhedruli)

GEORGIAN2021-04-15T11:00:54+00:00

PERSIAN/FARSI

2020-05-17T13:05:52+00:00

Persian Language, also known as Farsi, is the most widely spoken member of the Iranian branch of the Indo-Iranian languages, a subfamily of the Indo-European languages. It is the language of Iran (formerly Persia) and is also widely spoken in Afghanistan and, in an archaic form, in Tajikistan and the Pamir Mountain region. Persian

PERSIAN/FARSI2020-05-17T13:05:52+00:00

ARABIC

2021-04-15T10:56:15+00:00

Arabic is usually ranked among the top six of the world's major languages. As the language of the Qur'an, the holy book of Islam, it is also widely used throughout the Muslim world. It belongs to the Semitic group of languages which also includes Hebrew and Amharic, the main language of Ethiopia. There are

ARABIC2021-04-15T10:56:15+00:00

HEBREW

2021-04-15T10:59:55+00:00

Hebrew is a member of the Canaanite group of Semitic languages. It was the language of the early Jews, but from 586 BC it started to be replaced by Aramaic. By 200 AD use of Hebrew as an everyday language had largely ceased, but it continued to be used for literary and religious functions,

HEBREW2021-04-15T10:59:55+00:00

TURKISH

2020-05-17T13:07:06+00:00

The Turkish Language originated in The Altai Mountain Range in Northern Siberia centuries ago. For this reason, it is called an Altaic Language. As nomads expanded further into Asia Minor, they brought their language with them to Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and other countries. Many of these languages are mutually intelligible although local usage

TURKISH2020-05-17T13:07:06+00:00

CROATIAN

2020-05-17T13:07:29+00:00

Croatian in a South Slavic language spoken mainly in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbian province of Vojvodina and ther neighbouring countries by about 5.5 million people. The oldest texts in Croatian date back to the 11th century and were written in the Glagolitic alphabet, mainly in Croatia. The earliest text in the Latin

CROATIAN2020-05-17T13:07:29+00:00

SLOVAK

2020-05-17T13:10:04+00:00

The Slovak language is the official language of the Slovak Republic. Slovak is spoken by 4.5 million inhabitants of Slovakia, more than one million emigrants in the United States, and approximately 300,000 people in the Czech Republic. Smaller Slovak-language communities are situated in Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Poland, France, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Norway,

SLOVAK2020-05-17T13:10:04+00:00

LITHUANIAN

2020-05-17T13:10:17+00:00

Lithuanian is a Baltic language related to Latvian and Old Prussian with about 3.2 million speakers in Lithuania. There are also Lithuanian speakers in Poland, the USA, Brazil, Argentina, Canada, the UK and Uruguay. Lithuanian first appeared in print in the form of a catechism in 1547. The first Lithuanian dictionary was printed during

LITHUANIAN2020-05-17T13:10:17+00:00