No, Serbia is an independent nation, with its own long history.
The two peoples do share some characteristics; Serbians and Russians are majority Orthodox Christians, and are ethnically Slavs. This has led to a close relationship between the two peoples for centuries, perhaps most notably during the First World War, when Russia came to Serbia's defense, setting off a chain of alliances which turned the war into a Europe-wide conflict.
russian.
In russian it means trouble maker
The Russian Orthodox, Serbian Orthodox, and Carpatho-Russian churches
kapisko
No, her mom and dad didn't teached her to speak Serbian, but her mom teached her to speak Russian. Her dad is from Montenegro.
gvohz-DEN-ohveech... and it's Montenegrin or Serbian
The closest language to Russian is probably either Ukranian, Belarus, Bulgarian, or Serbian. Ukrainian, Belarussian, and Rusyn (arguably a dialect) are the closest languages, linguistically speaking, to Russian. They are East Slavic languages. Other Slavic languages are Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Bosnian.
Nikola Tesla was not Russian; he was born in what is now Croatia in 1856. He was a Serbian-American inventor and engineer known for his work in developing the modern alternating current (AC) electricity supply system.
The Cyrillic alphabet, which is used for Russian, Ukrainian, Belarussian, Bulgarian and Serbian, is named after St. Cyril.
No, it is considered a sub-group. "Eastern Orthodox" is a broad term used to edscribe the group of chruches that split with the Roman Catholics in the 11th century
The Austro-Serbian Alliance was made to prevent Russia from gaining control of Serbia. It is similar to the Dual Alliance because they were both made with Russian protection in mind.
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