bulgarian

listen to the pronunciation of bulgarian
الإنجليزية - التركية
Bulgarca

Rusça, Lehçe, Çekçe ve Bulgarca gibi dillerin ortak Slav kökenleri vardır. - Such languages as Russian, Polish, Czech and Bulgarian have common Slavic roots.

Bulgarca Rusçaya yakındır. - Bulgarian is close to Russian.

(isim) Bulgar
{i} Bulgar
Bulgaristan'a ait
{s} Bulgaristan ile ilgili
i., s
bulgaristanlı
bulgarian capital
bulgaristan başkenti
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
native from Bulgaria
The official language of Bulgaria
Relating to Bulgaria, its people or the Bulgarian language
{n} a native of Bulgaria in Turkey
{a} pertaining to Bulgaria
A Bulgarian is a Bulgarian citizen, or a person of Bulgarian origin
Bulgarian means belonging or relating to Bulgaria, or to its people, language, or culture
{i} one of Bulgarian origin, resident of Bulgaria
Bulgarian is the main language spoken by people who live in Bulgaria
{i} official language of Bulgaria
{s} of or pertaining to Bulgaria, of Bulgarian origin
Requires Cyrillic localization kit (e g InterType) English to Bulgarian lexicon Bulgarian to English lexicon
X: (Glis) - Sleshnikov sbilivez (Muscardinus) - Gorski sbilivez (Dryomys) - Gradinski sbilivez (Eliomys)
a Slavic language spoken in Bulgaria a native or inhabitant of Bulgaria of or relating to or characteristic of Bulgaria or its people; "the Bulgarian capital is Sofia
a Slavic language spoken in Bulgaria
a native or inhabitant of Bulgaria
of or relating to or characteristic of Bulgaria or its people; "the Bulgarian capital is Sofia"
Wylk
Bulgarian Hound
A breed of scenthound originating in Bulgaria
Bulgarian Hounds
plural form of Bulgarian Hound
Bulgarian Horrors
Atrocities committed by the Ottoman empire in subduing the Bulgarian rebellion of 1876. The name was used by William E. Gladstone in his pamphlet publicizing the incident. About 15,000 persons were reportedly massacred at Philippopolis (now Plovdiv), and villages and monasteries were destroyed. Despite widespread public indignation, the European powers did little in response. The crisis ended with the Congress of Berlin, which created a small, autonomous principality of Bulgaria
Bulgarian citizen
citizen of Bulgaria (country in southeastern Europe)
Bulgarian language
South Slavic language spoken by about nine million people in Bulgaria and enclaves in Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, and Turkey. Closely related is Macedonian, spoken by two to three million people in Macedonia, adjacent parts of Albania and Greece, and enclaves elsewhere. Both languages differ from other major Slavic languages in several features. Both are direct descendants of Old Church Slavonic. Under Ottoman rule, literary production was solely in Church Slavonic. The Bulgarian vernacular became a literary language only in the mid-19th century; it was codified on the basis of northeastern Bulgarian dialects in 1899. Though efforts to create a literary Macedonian were underway before the Balkan Wars (1912-13), it was not formally recognized as a distinct language until the declaration of a Macedonian Republic within nascent communist Yugoslavia (1944)
bulgarian monetary unit
monetary unit in Bulgaria
Old Bulgarian
Old Church Slavonic
Old Bulgarian
The Bulgarian recension of Old Church Slavonic (9th–11th century)
Bulgarians
plural of Bulgarian
bulgarian

    الواصلة

    Bul·ga·ri·an

    التركية النطق

    bılgeriın

    النطق

    /bəlˈgerēən/ /bəlˈɡɛriːən/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () Bulgaria +‎ -an
المفضلات