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  2. Serbian Wikipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_Wikipedia

    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 ...

  3. List of Serbo-Croatian words of Turkish origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Serbo-Croatian...

    In 1965 he published the dictionary named Turkisms in the Serbo-Croatian language (Turcizmi u srpskohrvatskom jeziku), which after several additions and revisions ended up having 8,742 words and 6,878 terms. An academic research in the Croatian dialectological field was done by Silvana Vranić and Sanja Zubčić at the University of Rijeka.

  4. Jovan Simić Bobovac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jovan_Simić_Bobovac

    Jovan Simić Bobovac (17. August 1775–26 July 1832) was a Serbian politician, who began his career as knez during the Ottoman period, participated in the Serbian Revolution (1804–17), and served as the President of the Serbian Supreme Court.

  5. Bookmate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookmate

    Bookmate was created in 2007 by three former employees of the Russian edition of Look At Me - programmers Andrei Zotov and Egor Khmelev and designer Kirill Ten. In its first version, Bookmate was an aggregator and search engine for bookstores, offering the user the best price. In 2009, the creators relaunched it as a book reading app with ...

  6. European Western Balkans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Western_Balkans

    European Western Balkans (sometimes abbreviated EWB) is a web portal that focuses on the Western Balkans countries and reports on development of the European Union's enlargement policy towards the states of North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo.

  7. Serbian diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_diaspora

    There are 185 303 people of Serbian origin living in Switzerland, making the 4th largest ethnic group. They are located mostly in the regions of Geneva, Lausanne, Basel and Zurich. Most Serbs moved to Switzerland during the 1960 's and 1970 's, some also came as refugees during the Yugoslav wars of the 1990's.

  8. Svetozar Marković - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svetozar_Marković

    Svetozar Marković ( Serbian Cyrillic: Светозар Марковић, pronounced [sʋêtozaːr mǎːrkoʋit͡ɕ]; 9 September 1846 – 26 February 1875) was a Serbian political activist, literary critic and socialist philosopher. He developed an activistic anthropological philosophy with a definite program of social change.

  9. Loanwords in Serbian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loanwords_in_Serbian

    There exists loanwords in Proto-Slavic from non-Indo-European languages. Among Uralic and Turkic lexemes, estimated to have been adopted between the 3rd and 7th century, surviving into modern Serbian are čaša (cup, mug, glass), knjiga (book), kovčeg (chest), krčag (pitcher), sablja (sabre). [7] Adoptions from Avaric in the 6th–7th ...