The official state language is Slovak, and Hungarian is widely spoken in the southern regions. Despite its modern European economy and society, Slovakia has a significant rural element. About 45% of Slovaks live in villages with fewer than 5,000 inhabitants, and 14% in villages with fewer than 1,000. Immigration. Foreign residents:
Yes, I think it would be different for Slovak. I don't have a source but I wonder if Slovak speakers learning English have a tendency to apply Slovak rules for where the [w] allophone appears (e.g. very [ʋɛ̝ri], wary [ʋɛ̝ri], how [xaʊ̯], have [xaʊ̯]), or if it would just be easier for them to pronounce the sounds as in English because they have both in Slovak (e.g. very [ʋɛ̝ri
A Slovak family in Hungary (1907, Sátoraljaújhely) Slovaks in Hungary (Slovak: Maďarskí Slováci, Hungarian: magyarországi szlovákok or magyarországi tótok) are the fourth largest minority in Hungary, after Romas, Germans and Romanians.According to the Microcensus in 2016, 29,794 Slovaks live in the country. The number of people who can speak the Slovak language is 56,107, but this
Slovak is a language of Slovakia. Roughly 84% of the population there speak it as a first language. There are almost 5 million first-language speakers of Slovak, in at least 130 territories. The vast majority are in Slovakia, around 200 thousand are in the Czech Republic, and the remainder are in other European territories and the United States. Slovak and Czech are mutually intelligible, and
Croatian (/ k r oʊ ˈ eɪ ʃ ən / ⓘ; hrvatski [xř̩ʋaːtskiː]) is the standardised variety of the Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language mainly used by Croats. It is the national official language and literary standard of Croatia, one of the official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, the Serbian province of Vojvodina, the European Union and a recognized minority language
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what language do slovakians speak