lithuanian

listen to the pronunciation of lithuanian
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} Litvanyalı
Litvanya dili
{s} Litvanya

Ben Litvanyaca konuşan küçük bir erkek kedi biliyorum. - I know a little tomcat that speaks Lithuanian.

(sıfat) Litvanya
{s} Litvanya, Litvanya'ya özgü
litvanya'lı
Litovca
Litvanyaca

Ben Litvanyaca konuşan küçük bir erkek kedi biliyorum. - I know a little tomcat that speaks Lithuanian.

الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
The main language of Lithuania
Referring to or coming from Lithuania
A person living in or coming from Lithuania
Lithuanian is the language spoken by people who live in Lithuania
{i} native or resident of Lithuania (republic in northern Europe)
A Lithuanian is a Lithuanian citizen, or a person of Lithuanian origin
{s} pertaining to Lithuania (republic in northern Europe)
{i} official language of Lithuania
Lithuanian means belonging or relating to Lithuania, or to its people, language, or culture
the official language of Lithuania; belongs to the Baltic branch of Indo European a native or inhabitant of Lithuania of or relating to or characteristic of Lithuania or its people or language
the official language of Lithuania; belongs to the Baltic branch of Indo European
Of or pertaining to Lithuania (formerly a principality united with Poland, but now Russian and Prussian territory)
A native, or one of the people, of Lithuania; also, the language of the Lithuanian people
a native or inhabitant of Lithuania
of or relating to or characteristic of Lithuania or its people or language
Lithuanian Hound
A large, powerful sighthound originating in Lithuania
Lithuanian Hounds
plural form of Lithuanian Hound
Lithuanian SSR
Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic, the name for the Republic of Lithuania while under the rule of the Soviet Union (1940-1991, name changed in 1990)
Lithuanian citizen
{i} citizen of Lithuania (country in eastern Europe on the Baltic sea)
Lithuanian language
East Baltic language spoken by more than four million people in the Republic of Lithuania and in diaspora communities, with perhaps 70,000 speakers in North America. Lithuanian is sparsely attested until 1547, when the first book in the language was printed. Efforts to develop a standard language in the late 19th century were dominated by speakers of the West High dialect spoken in German-ruled East Prussia. Among them was Jonas Jablonskis (1860-1930), whose orthography (based on the Latin alphabet with numerous diacritics) and grammar (1901) won official acceptance when Lithuania became independent. Lithuanian is renowned for its archaism among living Indo-European languages
lithuanian monetary unit
monetary unit in Lithuania
lithuanian

    الواصلة

    Lith·u·a·ni·an

    التركية النطق

    lîthıweyniın

    النطق

    /ˌləᴛʜəˈwānēən/ /ˌlɪθəˈweɪniːən/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () From Lithuania +‎ -an.
المفضلات