Yes, although Slovenian is a bit different.
The last name Hren is of Croatian and possibly Slovenian origin. Hren was originally given as a nickname for someone who has a sharp wit.
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This common Russian family name has the following ancestry :answer from ancestry.comBogdanovich -Belorussian and Ukrainian; Serbian and Croatian (Bogdanovic): patronymic from the personal name Bogdan.Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic): habitational name for someone from Bogdany in Poland or from the various places in Belarus called Bogdanovo, Bogdanovichi, or Bogdany.Bogdan -Polish, Slovak, Slovenian (Prekmurje, i.e. easternmost Slovenia), and Serbian: from the common Slavic personal name Bogdan, bohdan composed of the elements Bog'God' + dan 'gift'. This was not a Christian name sanctioned by the Orthodox Church, but was common as a familiar vernacular name, equivalent to Greek Theodoros 'gift of God' or Theodotos 'given by God'. As an American surname, it may also be a shortened form of any of numerous other Slavic surnames formed from this personal name. This is also found as a Romanian name.Hungarian (Bogdán): habitational name for someone from any of numerous places called Bogdány, in Abaúj, Pest, Szabolcs, and Veszprém counties, or in Máramaros, now in Romania.Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic): habitational name from any of numerous places in Belarus and Poland called Bogdany.
Study
To aquire something or someone
No, speaking into water would distort the sound waves and make it difficult to understand the person speaking. The water would muffle the words and change their clarity, making communication challenging.
God Bless in Serbian would be Bog te Blagoslovio or Bog Vas Blagoslovio. It depends who are you saying it to.Also it depends how u wanna use it in sentence... for example in USA they say " God bless you, or Bless you" when someone is sneezing.In Serbia that is not the case.. it's Na zdravlje.
Yes. I can. I can teach you basics. Both reading and speaking. Phrases. Grammar and vocabulary (same as we and other study for example English or German).
No. It's German. Haberle is an occupational name for someone who grows oats. In the Middle High German language, Haberle literally translates to "oats."
When someone can understand what your asking, maybe someone will help you!