serbo in English

prefix
1
Serbian; Serbian and ….
Serbo-Croat

Use "serbo" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "serbo" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "serbo", or refer to the context using the word "serbo" in the English Dictionary.

1. Callitrichaceous tritomas rales Amorousnesses Serbo-Croatian Sinophobia

2. Croatian is a standardized form of Serbo-Croatian

3. The Croats speak all three dialects of Serbo-Croatian

4. The Croats speak all three dialects of Serbo-Croatian

5. It’s the most-used dialect of the Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language

6. Serbo-Croatian: ·(mineralogy) Albite Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary

7. Belgrade, Serbo-Croatian Beograd (“White Fortress”), city, capital of Serbia

8. Live Lingua has two free coursebooks for Serbo-Croatian available to download

9. Bosniaks speak Serbo-Croatian, and it can be written in either Latin or Cyrillic.

10. Neither easy nor impossible, the Croatian language is the standardized variety of the Serbo-Croatian language

11. The dominating Serbo-Macedonian neotectonic swell was rifted, and subsided along the Struma and Vardar lineaments.

12. Serbo-Croatian (/ ˌ s ɜːr b oʊ k r oʊ ˈ eɪ ʃ ən / ()) – also called Serbo-Croat (/ ˌ s ɜːr b oʊ ˈ k r oʊ æ t /), Serbo-Croat-Bosnian (SCB), Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian (BCS), and Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian (BCMS) – is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro.It is a pluricentric language with four

13. Serbo-Croatian as used in Croatia, distinguished from Serbian primarily by Croats - definition of Croats by The Free Dictionary.

14. Baraqué; Descendants → English: barrack → German: Baracke → Serbo-Croatian: baraka; Further reading “Baraque” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé …

15. Other articles where Croat is discussed: Serbo-Croatian language: …of speech employed by Serbs, Croats, and other South Slavic groups (such as Montenegrins and Bosniaks, as Muslim Bosnians are known)

16. The Bosnian War (Serbo-Croatian: Rat u Bosni i Hercegovini / Рат у Босни и Херцеговини) was an international armed conflict that took place in Bosnia and Herzegovina between 1992 and 1995

17. Especially, letters with a horizontal stroke (like Serbo-Croatian Đ/đ, Maltese Ħ/ħ, or Comanche Ʉ/ʉ) are entered this way using the "horizontal stroke accent" located on the K key.

18. A city of southwest Yugoslavia on a promontory jutting into the Adriatic Sea. A popular tourist resort, it was a center of Serbo-Croatian culture and literature in medieval times. Population, sentence dictionary

19. [French Cravate, necktie worn by Croatian mercenaries in the service of France, from Cravate, a Croatian, from German dialectal Krabate, from Serbo-Croatian Hrvāt.] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

20. The African D should not be confused with either the eth (Ð, ð) of Icelandic, Faroese and Old English or with the D with stroke (Đ, đ) of Vietnamese, Serbo-Croatian and Sami languages.

21. In colloquial Serbo-Croatian, Bi is commonly used in place of other aorist forms when forming conditional of Biti in both singular and plural if the subject is deducible from context (usually from the conjugated form of the verb)

22. From the distribution of gold in northern Greece, conclusions are drawn and an attempt is made to explain the geological position of native and placer gold in the metamorphic formation of the Vardar Zone, Serbo-Macedonian Massif, Rila-Rhodope-Massif, and within alluvial sediments.

23. Croatian (/ k r oʊ ˈ eɪ ʃ ən / (); hrvatski [xř̩ʋaːtskiː]) is the standardized variety of the Serbo-Croatian language used by Croats, principally in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbian province of Vojvodina, and other neighboring countries.It is the official and literary standard of Croatia and one of the official languages of the European Union.

24. After its secession from Yugoslavia, the Bosnian government declared the official language to be called "Bosnian" rather than "Serbo-Croatian." Although "Croatian," "Serbian," and Montenegrin are considered by linguists and travellers alike to be the same language, with minor idiomatic differences, Bosnian is seen as a separate entity in modern times.

25. Cravat (n.) "type of neck-cloth worn usually by men," 1650s, from French Cravate (17c.), from Cravate, literally "Croatian," from German Krabate, from Serbo-Croatian Hrvat "a Croat" (see Croat).Cravats came into fashion 1650s in imitation of linen scarves worn by the Croats or Crabats, 17th-century light cavalry forces who fought on the side of the Catholic League in the Thirty Years' War.

26. Alveolus (n.) 1706, "a hollow," especially "the socket of a tooth," from Latin Alveolus "a tray, trough, basin; bed of a small river; small hollow or cavity," diminutive of alvus "belly, stomach, paunch, bowels; hold of a ship," from PIE root *aulo-"hole, cavity" (source also of Greek aulos "flute, tube, pipe;" Serbo-Croatian, Polish, Russian ulica "street," originally "narrow opening;" Old