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Ko name toku ingoa My name is insert name
A first name is the given name that typically comes before the last name in Western naming conventions, while the last name is the family name passed down through generations. Together, they make up a person's full name.
To give your name in German, you would say "Mein Name ist [Your Name]." This translates to "My name is [Your Name]."
There are few branches of Indo- European languages: 1. Germanic: German, Scandinavian languages, English... 2. Slavic: Russian, Polish... 3. Italic: Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Latin... 4. Anatolian: Old Assyrian... all extincted 5. Hellenic: Greek 6. Indo- Iranian: Iranian... 7. Celtic: Gaulish, Old Irish, Old Welsh... 8. Armenian 9. Baltic: Lithuanian, Kashubian 10. Albanian
your Maori name is your real name
Kashubian Griffin ended in 1941.
Kashubian Griffin was created in 1939.
Kashubian Landscape Park was created in 1983.
No. Kashubian is spoken in Poland and Germany, in the region of Pomerania.
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Jan Karnowski has written: 'Dr Florian Ceynowa' -- subject(s): Research, Slavists, Biography, History 'Moja droga kaszubska' -- subject(s): Biography, Kashubian Poets, Poets, Kashubian
James Frederick VerPlanck is known for his work "The American Literary Manuscripts Project: Scope, Background, and Priorities" as well as other publications in the field of American literature and manuscript studies.
The cast of Pension Butterpilz - Das Freizeitparadies - 1984 includes: Hilmar Eichhorn as Kostja Galuschin Monika Hetterle Ingeborg Krabbe Ingrid Schwienke as Klawa Ignatok Wolfgang Thal as Saizew
Answers: Russian, Ukrainian, Belarussian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Sorbian, Kashubian, Slovene, Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian, and Bulgarian.
The cast of Ich will Mjussow sprechen - 1967 includes: Viktoria Brams as Schura Harald Dietl as Kostia Sabine Eggerth as Klawa Ignatiuk Karin Jacobsen as Vera Karpowna Werner Kotzerke as Boris Kurt Sobotka as Mjussow Joachim Teege as Saitzew Jane Tilden as Sonja Dudkina Ellen Umlauf as Rosa
Polish is a West Slavic language, so it's closest linguistic relatives are other Slavic languages, and particularly other West Slavic ones. These, among others, include Czech and Slovak, as well as two official minority languages of Poland - Kashubian and Silesian. Polish is even partially mutually intelligible with Silesian and, to a limited degree, with Czech and Slovak.
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