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Serbian Cyrillic is an important symbol of Serbian identity. [4] In Serbia, official documents are printed in Cyrillic only [ 5 ] even though, according to a 2014 survey, 47% of the Serbian population write in the Latin alphabet whereas 36% write in Cyrillic.
Pančevo is located on flat plains at , approximately 17 km NE of Pančevo bridge to Belgrade and 43 km NW of SmederevoThe altitude above sea level is 77 meters. The southern city quarters are located on the bank of the Danube, the western quarters to the bank of Tamiš.
Jakša Dinić, Timocki dijalekatski recnik, (Institut za srpski jezik, Monografije 4; ISBN 978-86-82873-17-4) Beograd 2008, Momčilo Zlatanović, Rečnik govora južne Srbije. Vranje, 1998, 1–491. East-Herzegovinian dialect dictionaries: Milija Stanić, Uskočki rečnik I–II. Beograd 1990/1991.
As for the Pančevački Rit area, which has experienced a tenfold population growth since Pančevo Bridge was built, things are getting even more serious as city government has plans (though distant ones) to move Belgrade Port to the left bank and to begin a project of "Third Belgrade" in this area with 300,000–400,000 inhabitants (the first ...
The club won the Banat Zone League in the 2014–15 season and took promotion to the Serbian League Vojvodina, spending the next five years in the third tier.They ended in first place in the COVID-19-interrupted 2019–20 season and were promoted to the Serbian First League. [1]
The Directorate for Cooperation with the Diaspora and Serbs in the Region (Serbian: Управа за сарадњу с дијаспором и Србима у региону / Uprava za saradnju s dijasporom i Srbima u regionu) is a coordination body of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs within Government of Serbia. It was constituted on 2 August ...
The Serbian Wikipedia (Serbian: Википедија на српском језику, Vikipedija na srpskom jeziku) is the Serbian-language version of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Created on 16 February 2003, it reached its 100,000th article on 20 November 2009 before getting to another milestone with the 200,000th article on 6 July ...
Serbia has only one nationwide official language, which is Serbian.The largest other languages spoken in Serbia include Hungarian, Bosnian and Croatian.The Autonomous Province of Vojvodina has 6 official languages: Serbian, Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian, Croatian, Rusyn; whilst Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija, which Serbia claims as its own, has two: Albanian and Serbian.