No, It's regards.
The young one
Lubitza means little loved one or Violette
Slavic isn't just one language but a group of languages. if Slovak (spoken in Slovakia) is what you meant, then to cook - variť cook - kuchár other slavic languages should be similar. Richard
tee paluchil
There is no such language as Slavic.Slavic is a category of more than 20 languages, such as:RussianUkrainianRusynBelarusianSlovakCzechLechiticPolishSilesianKashubianUpper SorbianLower SorbianBulgarianMacedonianChurch SlavonicSerbo-CroatianBosnianSerbianCroatianMontenegrinBunjevac
English letters can be written in the Slavic script by transliterating them based on their sound equivalents in the Slavic alphabet. For example, the English letter "A" can be transliterated to the Slavic letter "А" which sounds like "ah." It's important to refer to a Slavic transliteration chart to accurately convert each English letter to its Slavic equivalent.
It means: "Let's drink kava!" (Kava being the national drink of Tonga). Cheers!
Cheers, Sarona; Congratulations, Sarona. Malo Sarona also translates to "Sarona won".
"Cheers!" in English is Alla salute! in Italian.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
The phrase nismo komsije is from the Slavic language Croatian. It translates in the English language to "we are not neighbors".