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Burmese
Burmese

Serbian
Serbian



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Burmese
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Serbian

Burmese and Serbian

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Countries

Countries

Myanmar
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Serbia, Slovakia

Total No. Of Countries

14
0 46
👆🏻

National Language

Myanmar
Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia

Second Language

Bangladesh, Burma
Not spoken in any of the countries

Speaking Continents

Asia
Europe

Minority Language

Mon
Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Slovakia

Regulated By

Myanmar Language Commission
Board for Standardization of the Serbian Language

Interesting Facts

  • The naming of people in Burmese is strange. There is no last name, often name is rhymed such as Ming Ming, Mo Mo or Jo Jo.
  • It appears as odd language to many people because it has peculiar pitch register, tonal form as language.
  • Serbian language was derived from the Old Church Salvic, as the language was commonly spoken by most of Slavic people in the 9th Century.
  • Serbian language is based on Stokavian dialect.

Similar To

Thai Language
Bosnian and Croatian Languages

Derived From

Pali Language
-

Alphabets

Alphabets in

Alphabets

3330
18 247
👆🏻

Phonology

How Many Vowels

125
0 32
👆🏻

How Many Consonants

3325
9 60
👆🏻

Scripts

Tangut
Cyrillic, Latin

Writing Direction

Left-To-Right, Horizontal
Left-To-Right, Horizontal

Hard to Learn

Language Levels

35
2 12
👆🏻

Time Taken to Learn

44 weeks44 weeks
3 88
👆🏻

Greetings

Hello

မင်္ဂလာပါ (maingalarpar)
Здраво (Zdravo)

Thank You

ကျေးဇူးတင်ပါသည် (kyaayyjuutainparsai)
Хвала лепо (Hvala lepo)

How Are You?

နေကောင်းလား? (naykaungglarr?)
Како си? (Kako si?)

Good Night

ကောင်းသောညပါ (kaunggsawnyapar)
Лаку ноћ (Laku noć)

Good Evening

မင်္ဂလာညနေခင်းပါ (main g lar nyanayhkainn par)
Добро вече (Dobro veče)

Good Afternoon

မင်္ဂလာနေ့လည်ခင်းပါ (main g lar naelaihkainn par)
Добар дан (Dobar dan)

Good Morning

မင်္ဂလာနံနက်ခင်းပါ (main g lar nannaathkainnpar)
Добро јутро (Dobro jutro)

Please

ကျေးဇူးပြု (kyaayyjuupyu)
Молим (Molim)

Sorry

တောင်းပန်ပါတယ် (taunggpaanpartaal)
Жао ми је (Žao mi je)

Bye

နုတ်ဆက်ပါတယ် (notesaatpartaal)
Довиђења (Doviđenja)

I Love You

မင်းကိုချစ်တယ် (mainnkohkyittaal)
Волим те (Volim te)

Excuse Me

ဆင်ခြေဆင်လက် ငါ့ကိုအ (Sainhkyaysainlaat ngarko a)
Извините (Izvinite)

Dialects

Dialect 1

Arakanese
Prizren-Timok

Where They Speak

Bangladesh, India, Myanmar
Southeastern Serbia

How Many People Speak

2,000,000.0012,000,000.00
1.5 960000000
👆🏻

Dialect 2

Tavoyan
Smederevo–Vršac

Where They Speak

Myanmar
Serbia

How Many People Speak

440,000.0012,000,000.00
700 274000000
👆🏻

Dialect 3

Intha
Torlakian

Where They Speak

Burma
Bulgaria, France, Kosovo, Macedonia, Romania, Serbia

How Many People Speak

90,000.001,500,000.00
2 230000000
👆🏻

Total No. Of Dialects

53
0 188
👆🏻

How Many People Speak

How Many People Speak?

43.00 million8.70 million
0 1200
👆🏻

Speaking Population

0.50 %0.13 %
0 89
👆🏻

Native Speakers

33.00 million8.70 million
0 873
👆🏻

Second Language Speakers

10.00 million12.00 million
0.01 400
👆🏻

Native Name

ဗမာစကား (bama saka)
српски (srpski) српски језик (srpski jezik)

Alternative Names

Bama, Bamachaka, Myanmar, Myen, myanma bhasa
Montenegrin

French Name

birman
serbe

German Name

Birmanisch
Serbisch

Pronunciation

[bəmɛ̀]
[sr̩̂pskiː]

Ethnicity

Bamar people
Serbs

History

Origin

1113 AD
11th Century

Language Family

Sino-Tibetan Family
Indo-European Family

Subgroup

Tibeto-Burman
-

Branch

-
-

Language Forms

Early Forms

Old Burmese, Middle Burmese, Burmese
No early forms

Standard Forms

Modern Burmese
Standard Serbian

Language Position

4344
1 120
👆🏻

Signed Forms

Burmese sign language
Srpski Znakovni Jezik (SZJ)

Scope

Individual
Individual

Code

ISO 639 1

my
sr

ISO 639 2

ISO 639 2/T

mya
srp

ISO 639 2/B

bur
srp

ISO 639 3

mya
srp

ISO 639 6

mya
srp

Glottocode

sout3159
serb1264

Linguasphere

No data available
53-AAA-g

Types of Language

Language Type

Living
Living

Language Linguistic Typology

Subject-Object-Verb
Subject-Verb-Object

Language Morphological Typology

Analytic, Isolating
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Burmese and Serbian Alphabets

Burmese and Serbian Alphabets provides you with alphabets, vowels and consonants in Burmese and Serbian. In Burmese Alphabets there are 33 letters while in Serbian Alphabets there are 30 letters. To learn Burmese and Serbian languages the very first thing is to understand and learn alphabets of Burmese and Serbian languages. The Burmese phonology consist Burmese vowels and Burmese consonants. After alphabets, words are to be learned and after words, phrases in that language. Take a look at Burmese greetings vs Serbian greetings, where you will find numerous useful phrases. Find whether Burmese and Serbian are Most Spoken Languages.

All Burmese and Serbian Dialects

Most languages have dialects where each dialect differ from other dialect with respect to grammar and vocabulary. Here you will get to know all Burmese and Serbian dialects. Various dialects of Burmese and Serbian language differ in their pronunciations and words. Dialects of Burmese are spoken in different Burmese Speaking Countries whereas Serbian Dialects are spoken in different Serbian speaking countries. Also the number of people speaking Burmese vs Serbian Dialects varies from few thousands to many millions. Some of the Burmese dialects include: Arakanese, Tavoyan. Serbian dialects include: Prizren-Timok , Smederevo–Vršac. Also learn about dialects in South American Languages and North American Languages.

Burmese and Serbian Speaking population

Burmese and Serbian speaking population is one of the factors based on which Burmese and Serbian languages can be compared. The total count of Burmese and Serbian Speaking population in percentage is also given. The percentage of people speaking Burmese language is 0.50 % whereas the percentage of people speaking Serbian language is 0.13 %. When we compare the speaking population of any two languages we get to know which of two languages is more popular. Find more details about how many people speak Burmese and Serbian on Burmese vs Serbian where you will get native speakers, speaking population in percentage and native names.

Burmese and Serbian Language Codes

Burmese and Serbian language codes are used in those applications where using language names are tedious. Burmese and Serbian Language Codes include all the international language codes, glottocodes and linguasphere.