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Three-finger salute. The three-finger salute (Serbian: поздрав са три прста, romanized: pozdrav sa tri prsta); or three fingers, (Serbian: три прста, romanized: tri prsta), commonly known as the Serbian salute (Serbian: српски поздрав, romanized: srpski pozdrav), is a salute which the thumb, index and middle finger are extending.
In numerology, 11:11 is considered to be a significant moment in time for an event to occur. [1] [2] It is seen as an example of synchronicity, ...
A sator square using the mirror writing for the representation of the letters S and N was carved in a stone wall in Oppède (France) between the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages, [26] thus producing a work made up of 25 letters and 8 different characters, 3 naturally symmetrical (A, T, O), 3 others decipherable from left to right (R, P, E), and ...
15 February 1: Statehood Day: Дан државности: Dan državnosti: Anniversary of the First Serbian Uprising and Serbian Revolution in 1804 and the first Constitution in 1835. 16 February 1: moveable Easter – 2 days: Great Friday: Велики петак: Veliki petak: Serbian Orthodox Church calculates Easter using Orthodox Computus ...
Some 67% of households are provided with pay television services (i.e. 38.7% cable television, 16.9% IPTV, and 10.4% satellite). [5] There are 90 pay television operators (cable, IPTV, DTH), largest of which are SBB (mainly cable) with 48% market share, Telekom Srbija (mts TV) with 25%, followed by PoštaNet with 5%, and Ikom and Kopernikus with 4% and 3%, respectively.
Grade 6: 11-13 Grade 7: 12-14 Grade 8: 13-15 Secondary School: Year 1: 14-16: Gymnasium and 4-year Professional School Craft School Year 2: 15-17 Year 3: 16-18 Year 4 ...
Radio Belgrade 2 shares the same radio waves as Radio Belgrade 3 and is broadcast from 6:00 until 20:00. Radio Belgrade 3 focuses on classical music and radio dramas. Radio Belgrade 3 shares the same radio waves as Radio Belgrade 2 and broadcasts from 20.00 until 06.00. Radio Belgrade 202 broadcasts short news segments, rock and pop music.
Along with a culture of gun ownership and many households keeping guns as war trophies from the 20th-century wars in the region, [7] [8] [6] illegal weapons became particularly widespread in some Balkan countries following the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s. [5] [6] [9] Mass shootings are rare in Serbia and the rest of the Balkans. [10]