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At the same time, 26.9% of respondents said they could understand some words and simple phrases, but could not read, write or speak English at all. 19.2% of Ukrainians said they could read, write or speak some English, but not well. Among those surveyed, 7.5% can read, write and speak English, but not fluently.
Ukrainian is declaratively proclaimed as one of three official languages of the breakaway Moldovan region of Transnistria. [101] Ukrainian is widely spoken within the 400,000-strong (in 1994) Ukrainian community in Brazil. [102] It is the official language in Prudentópolis alongside Portuguese. [103] [104] [105]
Contrastive Topology of the English and Ukrainian Languages. Vinnytsia: Nova Knyha Publishers. ISBN 966-7890-27-9. "What language is spoken in Ukraine", in Welcome to Ukraine, 2003, 1. All-Ukrainian population census 2001; Конституція України (Constitution of Ukraine) (in Ukrainian), 1996, English translation (excerpts). 1897 ...
Jewish immigrants to Israel (especially from Europe) have a different mother tongue, such as Arabic, Amharic, Yiddish, Ladino, Russian, Romanian, Polish, Ukrainian, English, or French and many Jewish immigrants from Latin America speak Spanish and Portuguese. The Arab population of Israel speaks Arabic.
The total number of people who reported being able to speak Ukrainian was 1,815,210 (5th place after Russian, English, Tatar, and German). According to the 2010 Russian census, the number of people who reported being able to speak Ukrainian decreased to 1,129,838. Additionally, 499,466 people identified Ukrainian as their mother tongue.
Balachka (Ukrainian: балачка, IPA: [bɐˈlat͡ʃkɐ], lit. ' conversation, chat ') is a Ukrainian dialect spoken in the Kuban and Don regions, where Ukrainian settlers used to live. It was strongly influenced by Cossack culture.
In a newly renovated apartment building in the city, Florida Troshina, a Russian-speaking Ukrainian, wept over the death of her daughter, killed just two days before Russian troops arrived.
Ukrainian orthography is based on the phonemic principle, with one letter generally corresponding to one phoneme. The orthography also has cases in which semantic, historical, and morphological principles are applied. In the Ukrainian alphabet the "Ь" could also be the last letter in the alphabet (this was its official position from 1932 to 1990).