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Classification. Slovene is an Indo-European language belonging to the Western subgroup of the South Slavic branch of the Slavic languages, together with Serbo-Croatian.
- 2.5 million (2010)
The official and national language of Slovenia is Slovene, which is spoken by a large majority of the population. It is also known, in English, as Slovenian. Two minority languages, namely Hungarian and Italian, are recognised as co-official languages and accordingly protected in their residential municipalities. [7]
Estatus oficial. El esloveno es el idioma oficial de la República de Eslovenia y fue desde 1918 hasta 1991 uno de los tres idiomas oficiales de Yugoslavia hasta la independencia eslovena.
- 2,2 millones
- Centroeuropa
Slovene (or Slovenian) is a language. It is the official language of Slovenia. Experts estimate that 2.5 million people can understand and speak Slovene. It is a Slavic language, written for more than 1000 years. The earliest written records are the Freising manuscripts.
- 2.5 million (2010)
- [sloˈʋenski ˈjɛzik], [sloˈʋenʃtʃina]
http://www.bbc.co.uk/slovene Slavic languages Belarusian , Bosnian , Bulgarian , Croatian , Czech , Goral , Kashubian , Knaanic , Macedonian , Montenegrin , Old Church Slavonic , Polish , Russian , Rusyn , Serbian , Silesian , Slovak , Slovenian , Sorbian , Ukrainian , West Polesian
The official language in Slovenia is Slovene, which is a member of the South Slavic language group. In 2002, Slovene was the native language of around 88% of Slovenia's population according to the census, with more than 92% of the Slovenian population speaking it in their home environment.
The Slovene Wikipedia ( Slovene: slovenska Wikipedija) is the Slovene-language edition of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. It has been active since 26 February 2002. On 15 August 2010, it reached 100,000 articles. As of March 2024, it has about 185,000 articles.