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Slovene

Slovene

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Slovene (also called Slovenian or Slovenščina) belongs to the Western subgroup of the South Slavic branch of the Indo-European Language Family. Like all Slavic languages, Slovene has its roots in Proto-Slavic, the ancestral language from which all Slavic languages had evolved. According to Ethnologue, Slovene is spoken by 1.9 million people in the Republic of Slovenia. It is also spoken in Italy, Austria, Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. There are 2.1 million speakers of Slovene worldwide.

 

Status

Slovene is the official language of the Republic of Slovenia. It is used in all public, social, and private communication. There are numerous newspapers, periodicals, and books published in Slovene.

 

Dialects

Slovene has a number of dialects, not all of them mutually intelligible. There are at least eight regional varieties. Among them are the following:

 

Structure

Sound system

 

Vowels

Slovene has 8 vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that differentiate word meaning. Vowel length differentiates word meaning. Stressed vowels can be long or short, but long vowels are always stressed.

Close
i
u
Mid
e
ə
o
Open
ε
a
ɔ

 

Consonants

Slovene has 21 consonant phonemes. All voiced stops, fricatives and affricates are devoiced at the end of words, e.g., slab ‘weak’ is pronounced as [slap].

voiceless
p
t
k
voiced
b
d
g
voiceless
f
s
ʃ
x
voiced
v
z
ʒ
voiceless
ts
voiced
dz
m
n
l
r
w
j

 

Stress

Like Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian, Slovenian has a pitch accent. Long vowels can be either falling or rising, short vowels are typically falling.

 

Grammar

Slovene is a richly inflected synthetic language with a grammar that is very similar to that of other Slavic languages. Grammatical categories are expressed as synthetic inflections added to the stems of nouns, adjectives, verbs, and most pronouns. All native Slovene stems are inflected, as well as most borrowings from other languages.

 

Nouns, adjectives, and pronouns

Slovene nouns are marked for gender, number, and case. The three are fused into one ending, as in all Slavic languages.

 

Verbs

Slovenian verbs have conflated endings that express person and number for non-past conjugations; and gender, number, and person for past conjugations. They agree with their subjects in person and number.

 

Word order

The neutral word order in Slovene is Subject-Object-Verb. However, other orders are also possible since inflectional endings take care of keeping clear grammatical relations and roles in the sentence. Word order is principally determined by topic (what the sentence is about, or old information) and focus (new information). Constituents with old information precede constituents with new information, or those that carry the most emphasis.

 

Vocabulary

Most of Slovene vocabulary is derived from Proto-Slavic roots, shared by all Slavic languages. In the language has been influenced by a number of languages, most notably Serbian, Croatian, and German. In recent years, it has also borrowed a substantial number of words from English.

Below are a few common phrases in Slovenian.

Hello Zdravo
Good bye. Nasvidenje
Please. Prosim
Thank you. Hvala
Yes. Da
No. Ne
Man Mož
Woman Ženska

 

Below are Slovene numbers 1-10.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
ena
dva
tri
štiri
pet
šest
sedem
osem
devet
deset

 

Writing

The earliest known examples of a written Slovene dialect in the Latin script date back to about 1090 AD. They are among the oldest surviving documents in any Slavic language. Today Slovene is written with a modified Latin alphabet consisting of 25 letters plus additional 6 letters (Qq, Ww, Xx, Yy, Ćć and Đđ) that are used only in foreign names and loanwords. Accent is not marked, unless it distinguishes otherwise identical words, e.g., gòl ‘naked’ and gól ‘goal.’

A a
B b
C c
Č č
D d
E e
F f
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
L l
M m
N n
O o
P p
R r
S s
Š š
T t
U u
V v
Z z
Ž ž

 

Take a look at Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Slovene.

Član 1
Vsi ljudje se rodijo svobodni in imajo enako dostojanstvo in enake pravice. Obdarjeni so z razumom in vestjo in bi morali ravnati drug z drugim kakor bratje.
Article 1
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

How difficult is it to learn Slovenian?
Slovenian is considered to be a Category II language in terms of difficulty for speakers of English.