russian and other neighboring languages
russian.
there was 92 nationalities and 112 different languages. There was nationalist movements emerged in the republic that made up the Soviet Union
The Soviet Union
The Soviet Union wanted war.
the Soviet Union brokedown on 1989!
russian.
The main languages spoken in the Baltic Republics are Lithuanian, Latvian, and Estonian. Russian is also commonly spoken in these countries due to historical ties with the former Soviet Union.
russian.
there was 92 nationalities and 112 different languages. There was nationalist movements emerged in the republic that made up the Soviet Union
there was 92 nationalities and 112 different languages. There was nationalist movements emerged in the republic that made up the Soviet Union
The language spoken in Germany is German. It is a West Germanic language and is one of the most widely spoken languages in the European Union.
The USSR (also known as the Soviet Union) ceased to exist since January 1, 1992, but the predominant language was Russian. There were probably some fifteen other more or less official languages.
I will point the European Union (the matter of fact a confederation of countries but with common political bodies like parliament and government), with 23 OFFICIAL languages and an uncountable number of spoken languages and dialects. India has 23 officially recognized languages, with over 1,600 different languages spoken.
Spoken languages are languages that are spoken by people for communication. They involve vocalization and sound production to convey meaning, as opposed to written languages, which use visual symbols for communication. There are thousands of spoken languages used around the world.
The Cyrillic alphabet is used for many languages of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, including Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian (Belarusian), Serbian, Macedonian and Bulgarian, as well as Mongolian. During the Soviet period, most of the Soviet republics used the Cyrillic alphabet for their national languages; since the breakup of the Soviet Union, some of those languages have switched to the Latin alphabet (Azerbaijani, Moldovan, Turkmen and Uzbek), while others have stayed with the Cyrillic alphabet (Kazakh, Kyrgyz and Tajik). Many of the minority languages in Russia are also written in the Cyrillic alphabet.
no, its not! The Soviet Union is Russia.
Abraham Kreusler has written: 'The teaching of modern foreign languages in the Soviet Union'