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"Thank you" Less frequently: "It is true" or "Health you have" Silesian: Pyrsk! "Cheers" Unknown Sinhala: ආයුබෝවන් (Ayubowan) "Have a long life" Thank you "Thank you" Slovak: Na zdravie "To your health" Ďakujem "Thank you" Slovenian: Na zdravje, Res je, or the old-fashioned Bog pomagaj "To your health", "it is true", or "God ...
This includes all letters, as well as some other words, such as nebọ́digatrẹ́ba 'menace', jȍj/jọ̑j 'oh', and čačačȃ 'Cha-cha-cha'. There are, however, only a handful of words that feel natural to be declined this way; for many of them, it is preferred to be declined following the first masculine declension.
During most of the Middle Ages, Slovene was a vernacular language of the peasantry, although it was also spoken in most of the towns on Slovenian territory, together with German or Italian. Although during this time German emerged as the spoken language of the nobility, Slovene had some role in the courtly life of the Carinthian, Carniolan, and ...
The word "Slovenia" [Slovenija], referring to the country of the Slovenes, which before 1945, was merely a hope and an idea, derives from the name for the people, i.e., "Slovene." The word "Slovenian" derives from the word "Slovenia" and means "relating to the land of the Slovenes."
A personal pronoun denotes the speaker (I), the addressee (you) or a third person (it). Personal pronouns in Slovene are inflected in a somewhat unusual way, for there are many different forms for each of the pronouns. Several of the pronouns have unstressed and clitic forms that are unstressed, and may attach to another word. For example:
The best thank-you note etiquette is to send it within a week of what you are thanking the person for, be it a party or a gift. But you should also always send a thank-you note, no matter how late ...
Slovenian National Corpus FidaPLUS is the 621 million words (tokens) corpus of the Slovene language, gathered from selected texts written in Slovenian of different ...
1. “Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes are truly endless.” — Mother Teresa 2. “Showing gratitude is one of the simplest yet most powerful things humans can do for ...