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  2. Bulgarian grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_grammar

    Bulgarian grammar is the grammar of the Bulgarian language. Bulgarian is a South Slavic language that evolved from Old Church Slavonic—the written norm for the Slavic languages in the Middle Ages which derived from Proto-Slavic. Bulgarian is also a part of the Balkan sprachbund, which also includes Greek, Macedonian, Romanian, Albanian and ...

  3. Bulgarian verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_verbs

    Bulgarian verbs are inflected not only for aspect, tense and modality, but also for evidentiality, that is, the source of the information conveyed by them. There is a four-way distinction between the unmarked (indicative) forms, which imply that the speaker was a witness of the event or knows it as a general fact; the inferential, which signals ...

  4. Bulgarian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_language

    Bulgarian (/ b ʌ l ˈ ɡ ɛər i ə n / ⓘ, / b ʊ l ˈ-/ bu(u)l-GAIR-ee-ən; български език, bŭlgarski ezik, pronounced [ˈbɤɫɡɐrski] ⓘ) is an Eastern South Slavic language spoken in Southeast Europe, primarily in Bulgaria. It is the language of the Bulgarians.

  5. Bulgarian pronouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_pronouns

    In Bulgarian, personal pronouns change according to whether it is: subject, or nominative case (именителен падеж). Since number and person are marked on Bulgarian verbs, the subject pronouns are used only for emphasis or to resolve ambiguity.

  6. Bulgarian nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_nouns

    Bulgarian nouns have the categories: grammatical gender, number, case (only vocative) and definiteness.A noun has one of three specific grammatical genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) and two numbers (singular and plural), with cardinal numbers and some adverbs, masculine nouns use a separate count form.

  7. Bulgarian phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_phonology

    The first Bulgarian grammar to mention phonetics is Ivan Bogorov's First Bulgarian Grammar, where he identified 22 consonants, however, including among them щ (ʃt), ъ and ь (no phonemic status at word end). [49] In 1868, Ivan Momchilov identified only 21 consonants. [50]

  8. Category:Bulgarian grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Bulgarian_grammar

    Pages in category "Bulgarian grammar" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. ... Bulgarian pronouns; V. Bulgarian verbs This page was ...

  9. BulPosCor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BulPosCor

    The Bulgarian Part of Speech-annotated Corpus (BulPosCor) (in Bulgarian: Български Пос анотиран корпус (БулПосКор)) is a morphologically annotated general monolingual corpus of written language where each item in a text is assigned a grammatical tag.