Slovac you speak in Slovakia and Slovenian or Slovene you speak in Slovenia. To add more, the languages are both Slavic, so they have some basic simmilatities, but are also very different. They are not in any way simmilar languages.
The main differences between Slovak and Slovenian languages lie in their linguistic roots, grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. Slovak is a West Slavic language with similarities to Czech and Polish, while Slovenian is a South Slavic language with connections to Croatian and Serbian. Additionally, Slovak has a more complex grammar structure and a larger vocabulary compared to Slovenian. Pronunciation also differs between the two languages, with Slovak having a softer and more melodic sound, while Slovenian has a more distinct and sharp pronunciation.
Catholics don't squat 350.
Of course. There're Czechs,Polish,Slovak,Hungarian,Ukrainian,Romanian and serbian。
Vesela veľká noc is Happy Easter in the Slovak Language
republic srpska is a serbian country in federation of bosnia and herzegovina and republic of Serbia is a independent country.
The main differences between Slovenian and Slovak languages lie in their linguistic roots, grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. Slovenian belongs to the South Slavic language group, while Slovak is a West Slavic language. Slovenian has more complex grammar and a larger vocabulary compared to Slovak. Additionally, Slovenian pronunciation is more phonetic, while Slovak pronunciation is more influenced by historical factors.
There is no such language as Yugoslavian. The six countries and two provinces that were once known as Yugoslavia are independent now, and they each have different languages:Serbia - SerbianCroatia - CroatianBosnia and Herzegovina- Bosnian, Serbian, CroatianMacedonia - MacedonianSlovenia - SlovenianMontenegro - MontenegrinKosovo - Albanian, SerbianVojvodina - Serbian, Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian, Croatian, Rusyn
Albania and Kosova are Albanian 100%, Bosnia is Bosnian and Serbia is serbian
Otec
This is not a slovak word. It doesn't mean anything in slovak.
Russian Czech Polish Slovak Bulgarian Slav-Macedonian Bosnian Serbian Croatian Montenegrin Slovenian (These are the main languages, who have the largest speaking population and official status is Eastern Europe)
The closest language to Russian is probably either Ukranian, Belarus, Bulgarian, or Serbian. Ukrainian, Belarussian, and Rusyn (arguably a dialect) are the closest languages, linguistically speaking, to Russian. They are East Slavic languages. Other Slavic languages are Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Bosnian.