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The Serbian Wikipedia (Serbian: Википедија на српском језику, Vikipedija na srpskom jeziku) is the Serbian-language version of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Created on 16 February 2003, it reached its 100,000th article on 20 November 2009 before getting to another milestone with the 200,000th article on 6 July ...
As of February 2025, the Serbo-Croatian Wikipedia is the second largest South Slavic version and the 32nd largest Wikipedia in the world. [4] A substantial portion of Serbo-Croatian Wikipedia articles are geography, astronomy, and chemistry-related stubs created by Wikipedia bots between 2013 and 2015. By 2023, bots contributed to 41% of the ...
Srpski nacional (2005–2006, Belgrade) Opozicija (2006, Belgrade) Start (2005–2006, Belgrade) Sutra (2007–2008, Belgrade) Kurir Sport (2007–2008, Belgrade) Gazeta (2007–2008, Belgrade) Biznis (2007–2008, Belgrade) Borba (1922–2009, Belgrade) Glas javnosti (1998–2010, Belgrade) Građanski list (2000–2010, Novi Sad) Press (2005 ...
The Matica srpska (Serbian: Матица српска, Matica srpska, Latin: Matrix Serbica) [1] is the oldest Serbian language independent, non-profit, non-governmental and cultural-scientific Serbian national institution.
Serbian Citation Index (Serbian: Srpski citatni indeks; SCIndeks) is a combination of an online multidisciplinary bibliographic database, a national citation index, an Open Access full-text journal repository and an electronic publishing platform. [2]
Kaluđerica originated during the Ottoman rule of Serbia.A group of refugees who fled the Turks, settled at the bottom of the valley between two major roads. They cleared the thick woods around the creek and up to the 1950s, the settlement was predominantly agrarian, with most of the inhabitants working in agriculture and cattle breeding.
The two alphabets are almost directly and completely interchangeable. Romanization can be done with no errors, but, due to the use of digraphs in the Latin script (due to letters "nj" (њ), "lj" (љ), and "dž" (џ)), knowledge of Serbian is sometimes required to do proper transliteration from Latin back to Cyrillic.
Number 55 (Croatian: Broj 55) is a 2014 Croatian war film directed by Kristijan Milić, billed as "the first action movie" about the 1991–95 Croatian War of Independence. The film won eight Golden Arenas, including the Big Golden Arena for Best Film. The cast also includes Luka Peroš best known for his role of Marseille in Money Heist. [2]