Loved to listen to this Splendid video while I was cooking today, Alja! 😊 Thank you for sharing it! Now I'm writing them down to practice! Love the pronunciation of the numbers in slovenian 😀😊 Have a wonderful day! ☺️
Hi Alja, I still remember how to count to 100 (and beyond) thanks to the beginner classes I had with you in 2018 on iTalki, when I spent 1 month in Ljubljana for a work assignment. Though I couldn't really articulate well, I could at least use some of that knowledge. People were very pleased with my efforts, though they weren't really necessary (almost everybody in Ljubljana speaks English anyway). Planned to spend my vacation there in 2020 but guess what, the pandemic. 😐 Hoping to visit SLOVEnia again in 2022 of situation improves. Lovely place, lovely people. Greetings from Brazil, and a big HVALA!
Živjo Alja🙂! Ni zakaj. I must learn more Slovene 🙄, and I will seeing again your videos, as well. If everything will be fine🤞 we will move to Slovenia in this year's end, and I would like to know a liitle bit better.... more better😃, but this is a hard language🤔. Imejte lep dan🙂👋
Živjo Alja, kako se pravilno porabljata ta vezniki (pri, kot), ko želiš nekaj pokazati oziroma odgovarjati, na primer (bil sem kot zdravniku, ali: bile sem pri zdravniku) katera se porablja najbolj na določene primere. Hvala. (Upam da nisem naredil kakšno napake na vprašanje, kr res ful mi je teško izboljšati Slovenščino) 😫
It also resembles Czech. I suspect that numbers and certain other things are very similar in many Slavic languages. Most of the other vocabulary is much more different.
as a russian speaker i dissagree a bit. For example, the number 46 in russian sounds "sorok-šest' ", and in slovenian "šest-in-štiredeset". The first one is basically means 40 + 6 and the second one - 6 and 40. We have an opposite type for countino letters (sry for my bad english)
@@KartveliBijo As a non-Slavic person I can say that the numbers in Czech, Slovenian and Russian have extremely strong similarities. In your example, sest is already exactly the same. There are many more similarities and there is probably a reason why the numbers in all Slavic languages have so many similarities.
It’s very useful ..thank you for your video 😍😍😍😍 HAVALA ☺️
Loved to listen to this Splendid video while I was cooking today, Alja! 😊 Thank you for sharing it! Now I'm writing them down to practice! Love the pronunciation of the numbers in slovenian 😀😊 Have a wonderful day! ☺️
Živjo, Jonatan! Thank you for the nice comment! ☺️ Imej lep dan! 😊
אתה ישראלי?
Hi Alja, I still remember how to count to 100 (and beyond) thanks to the beginner classes I had with you in 2018 on iTalki, when I spent 1 month in Ljubljana for a work assignment. Though I couldn't really articulate well, I could at least use some of that knowledge.
People were very pleased with my efforts, though they weren't really necessary (almost everybody in Ljubljana speaks English anyway).
Planned to spend my vacation there in 2020 but guess what, the pandemic. 😐
Hoping to visit SLOVEnia again in 2022 of situation improves. Lovely place, lovely people.
Greetings from Brazil, and a big HVALA!
Hvala Alja. Super kot ponavadi :)
Hvala, Thomas! ☺️✨
Zdravo @@alja7435 What are they singing about? Something about a my little girl. ua-cam.com/video/Qkc619ldyo4/v-deo.html.
Beautiful, thank you Alja 🙏🏽.
Živjo Alja! Najlepsa hvala🙂
Živjo, István! Hvala tudi Vam! 😊✨
Živjo Alja🙂! Ni zakaj. I must learn more Slovene 🙄, and I will seeing again your videos, as well. If everything will be fine🤞 we will move to Slovenia in this year's end, and I would like to know a liitle bit better.... more better😃, but this is a hard language🤔. Imejte lep dan🙂👋
The best!
Živjo Alja, kako se pravilno porabljata ta vezniki (pri, kot), ko želiš nekaj pokazati oziroma odgovarjati, na primer (bil sem kot zdravniku, ali: bile sem pri zdravniku) katera se porablja najbolj na določene primere. Hvala. (Upam da nisem naredil kakšno napake na vprašanje, kr res ful mi je teško izboljšati Slovenščino) 😫
Alja, lahko prosim razložiš kako pregibajo svojilni pridevniki, jaz mam ful težave na tem delu. 🙏🙏🙏🙏
It sounds like Russian.
Do you agree with me?
It also resembles Czech. I suspect that numbers and certain other things are very similar in many Slavic languages. Most of the other vocabulary is much more different.
as a russian speaker i dissagree a bit. For example, the number 46 in russian sounds "sorok-šest' ", and in slovenian "šest-in-štiredeset". The first one is basically means 40 + 6 and the second one - 6 and 40. We have an opposite type for countino letters (sry for my bad english)
@@KartveliBijo As a non-Slavic person I can say that the numbers in Czech, Slovenian and Russian have extremely strong similarities. In your example, sest is already exactly the same. There are many more similarities and there is probably a reason why the numbers in all Slavic languages have so many similarities.