No.
Generally we refer to the English spoken in the British Isles as "British English," but the distinction could be made between various forms of it: Irish English, Scottish English and English English.
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
Literature in English is the writing written in English, but English in literature is the overall English literature that there is in the general category of "literature."
At secondary school there was English language and English literature. English language was punctuation etc. English literature was popems, stories etc.
Simplified English is English using simple vocabulary and sentence structure. English - normally is English is with sometimes sophisticated vocabulary and a range of sentence structures.
written phonetically in English it would be... "Nyet Spasiba." In Russian it is нет спасибо. The response "Нет, спасибо" (Nyet, spasEEbah) expresses a polite refusal. Sometimes you can hear even "Да нет, спасибо" (Da nyet, spasEEbah), which means the same.
"Nyet" is the Russian word for "no." It is commonly used to indicate denial or refusal.
"Yes" in Russian is "da", just as "no" is "nyet".
The Russian word for "no" is "нет" (pronounced as "nyet").
Gilligan's Island - 1964 Nyet Nyet Not Yet 2-9 was released on: USA: 18 November 1965
The opposite of "nyet" is "da," which means "yes" in Russian.
To say "no" in Russian, you can say "нет" (pronounced as "nyet").
Nyet
In Russian, "no" is spelled "нет" (pronounced as "nyet").
(no) "neyet" --------------------------------------- (no) "nyet"
Say nyet, which means no, and just shake your hand at the same time. Nyet is pronounced as n-yet
Nyet.