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But it was sorb a good school, and we wanted him to have the best.
The Kingdom of Sorb has the worst winters in the world.
A legacy of this period is the Sorb population in Saxony.
For some, the Sorb alliance with the Communists is partly understandable.
Bonn has pledged an initial $26 million for Sorb institutions like newspapers and theaters.
The Aramaic word zardasa may be the origin of the English sorb.
Sorbo, Italian for the sorb apple family of trees, hence:
They think that "Sorb" and "Sorbian" are bad words.
A day trip that includes a gentle round in a typical Sorb punt costs $27; reserve a place by phoning 8831015.
Even Mrs Sorb likes the colours and animations.
Sorb may refer to:
Großenhain was originally a Sorb settlement.
The last Sorb who spoke little or no German died in Műschen village in 1954.
Sorb leaders would like to see a television studio set up in the Sorb lands for regional programming.
Sorb (1988) (The Lead)
He was born in Dresden, Germany of mixed French and Lusatian Sorb heritage.
"We are not frustrated; we have courage," said Siegmund Musiat, a prominent Sorb scholar.
Q Sorb Coenzyme Q-10 by Vitaminol Inc.
The Sorb harvest celebrations require young men galloping by on horseback to tear the head off a dead rooster hanging by its feet from a wooden beam.
"It's a difficult psychological problem," said Horst Adam, editor of the Sorb weekly Nowy Casnik.
According to British historian Norman Davies Jaxa was most likely a Sorb or Lutician.
Jugoslovenima (English: For the Yugoslavs) is a poem written by Sorb poet Jan Skala.
Isolation Starts to Lift Now a new spirit stalks the farming villages and fortress-like towns of the Sorb lands, known as Lusatia.
Yet another new absorbent approach is San Sorb, which is being marketed by C&E Environmental Supplies in Sumner, Wash.
The monastery was moved to Nienburg Abbey in 975 with the aim of bringing the Christian faith to the Sorb population in Gau Serimuntt.
Some scholars predict that Upper Sorbian is in danger of extinction.
Sorbian may refer to more than one article:
Sorbian, a regional language of Germany, is a Slavic language.
These were all written in Lower Sorbian.
Lower Sorbian has both final devoicing and regressive voicing assimilation:
The consonant phonemes of Lower Sorbian are as follows:
Lower Sorbian is spoken in and around the city of Cottbus in Brandenburg.
Upper Sorbs, who speak Upper Sorbian (about 40,000 people).
In Germany, Upper and Lower Sorbian are officially recognized and protected as minority languages.
Signs in this region are usually bilingual, and Cottbus has a Gymnasium where one language of instruction is Lower Sorbian.
Wikipedia in Upper Sorbian (hsb)
The city of Cottbus (Chóśebuz) is considered the cultural centre of Lower Sorbian.
The phonology of Lower Sorbian has been greatly influenced by contact with German, especially in Cottbus and larger towns.
The translator was Miklawš Jakubica, who employed a now-extinct dialect of Lower Sorbian.
Upper Sorbian is a minority language in Germany according to the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.
- Dörgenhausen (Upper Sorbian: Němcy)
- Knappenrode (Upper Sorbian: Hórnikecy)
- Zeißig (Upper Sorbian: Ćisk)
The settlement Kruswica, after Upper Sorbian: Krušwa ("pear"), was first mentioned in a 1400 deed.
Some primary schools in the region teach bilingually, and in Cottbus there is an important Gymnasium whose main medium of instruction is Lower Sorbian.
Lübben Stadt (Lower Sorbian: Lubin město)
- Schwarzkolm (Upper Sorbian: Čorny Chołmc)
It is grouped in the West Slavic language branch, together with Lower Sorbian, Czech, Polish, Slovak and Kashubian.
Sorbian is also noted in one of the first multi-lingual dictionaries; Megiser's Thesaurus polyglottus, published in Frankfurt in 1603.
Mücka (Upper Sorbian: Mikow) is a municipality in the district Görlitz, Saxony, Germany.