Answer:
Serbian (official) and Hungarian (near the Hungarian border). No one speaks Albanian. (Excluding Kosovo)
Answer:
They speak Serbian, which is similar to Croatian and Bosnian. The official alphabet is in cyrillic, however, a latin alphabet is commonly used as well. There are 30 letters in the Serbian alphabet.
Serbian
Serbian 88.3% (official), Hungarian 3.8%, Bosniak 1.8%, Romany (Gypsy) 1.1%, other 4.1%, unknown 0.9%
Serbian
Serbian people speak Serbian (Croatian and Bossnian is same languages as Serbian -former Serbo-Croatian). This is one of Slavic languages ( Russian, Czech, Polish, Bulgarian, Slovak, Macedonian, Ukrainian, Slovenian ). Like other Slavic languages are difficult to learn for English speakers. Serbian language is one of the 5 most difficult languages to learn in the world.
Official language is Serbian (also known in the past as Serbo-Croatian), but there are languages spoke by the minorities such as Albanians, Bulgarians, Hungarians, Slovaks etc...
Language spoken in Serbia is "Srpski" or Serbian Language.
Serbian language.
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Serbian
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The 1 official language of Serbia is Serbian, spoken nearly everywhere except Vojvodina and southern Serbia, as well excluding larger part of Kosovo.
Here is a list of all 15 languages spoken in Serbia:
1. Albanian, Gheg
2. Aromanian
3. Bosnian
4. Bulgarian
5. Croatian
6. Czech
7. Hungarian
8. Romani, Balkan
9. Romani, Sinte
10. Romanian
11. Romano-Serbian
12. Serbian
13. Serbo-Croatian
14. Slovak
15. Yugoslavian Sign Language
English
The most common language is English, but Minnesota has people from all over the world who speak many languages
Obúka lún ÊkimyúOccidentalOccitanOghamOgibáraOjibweOji-CreeOkinawanO'odhamOneidaOrgom SilawaOriyaOrkhonOrokOromoOsageOscanOshiWamboOsmanyaOssetianOtomiOttawaOxidilogi
If Arthur were a real person that lived in the 5th or 6th centuries, he would have spoken Brythonic and Latin. If he was from the western seaboard he may have spoken a Goidelic (Gaelic) / Brythonic mixed language).
Ethiopic was a subdivision of Semitic languages. It includes Amharic, Tigre, Tigrinya, and Geez subdivisions. It is no longer a language that is spoken.