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Albanian English

Meaning Albanian meaning

What does Albanian mean?
Definitions in simple English

Albanian

Albanian is the language that people from Albania speak.

Albanian

An Albanian is a person that comes from Albania.

Albanian

Something or someone that is Albanian comes from Albania.

Albanian

of or relating to Albania or its people or language or culture a native or inhabitant of Albania the Indo-European language spoken by the people of Albania

Synonyms Albanian synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Albanian?

Albanian English » English

Albanian language Standard Albanian

Examples Albanian examples

How do I use Albanian in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Do you speak Albanian?
My nationality is Albanian.
I am learning Albanian.
The speed at which he keeps churning out sentences in Albanian makes me wonder if 'he' is a machine.
Tirana is an Albanian town.
This book is written in Albanian.
I don't speak Albanian.

Movie subtitles

On the Greek-Albanian front.
To a reception at the Albanian Embassy.
No, the Albanian restaurant on Staten Island.
What are they playing? It's an old Albanian folk song.
He has an Albanian passport.
Do you speak Albanian, St. Clare?
We got an Albanian interpreter, but he only speaks Rumanian.
Gentlemen, I have just been raped by the head of the Albanian Secret Service!
Retrieve the Albanian rocket plans which an Albanian agent has stolen.
The St Georges was off the Albanian coast.
He's an Albanian.
For one thing, you wouldn't be getting a French boy. You'd be getting an Albanian.
Affectionate little Albanian, isn't he?
The Chinese restaurant, 53rd Street? No, the Albanian restaurant on Staten Island.
Milos Marcovic, the Greco-Albanian born in Budapest, whose talent for writing book covers is such even the author doesn't recognise his own work.
A member of the Albanian Diplomatic Corps was mugged today in Central Park despite the fact that two patrolmen were only 100 yards away.
The Albanian claimed he screamed loudly for two minutes.
What is it now? - He's an Albanian. She's his interpreter.
Last week, an Albanian operative was killed.
You'd be getting an Albanian. - You mean all white with pink eyes?
Albanian.
Top people, Albanian desk.
Roust them out of bed. Albanian desk, cia, NSA. Roust them, sirens blaring.
We've just learned that the State Department. has set up a special Albanian task force at Ops Center.
You'd be getting an Albanian.
An Albanian: My Calvary started when I crossed the border.
The man you're interested in. surrendered to the police a year and a half ago, at the same time as Albanian refugees, and asked for the political asylum.
Such discipline, you see! An ex-soldier of the Albanian army.
You don't speak Albanian.
We're looking for an Albanian girl.
Give us the Albanian girl.

News and current affairs

After eight years of international administration, Kosovo's Albanian majority has tasted freedom and is eager for full independence.
Relations between Kosovo's Albanian majority and Serb minority remain uneasy.
Indeed, the OSCE still sticks its nose and fingers into pretty much every aspect of Albanian political life.
Albanian problems now demand homemade Albanian compromises.
When an Albanian minister tried last year to raise the question of the duration of the OSCE's mission, the opposition leapt to the OSCE's defense.
Nonetheless, there is a creeping perception that the OSCE is becoming too deeply engaged in picking winners and losers in Albanian politics - a perception underpinned by wider questions of sovereignty.
The likelihood is that early next year most of the European Union's member nations will recognize the Albanian-majority enclave on Serbia's southern edge as an independent state.
If the current negotiations on Kosovo's status fail, Albanian extremists will seek to expel the more than 100,000 Serbs who live there.
Local terrorist centers were also important. Indeed, in Albania terrorists were trained on the property of former Albanian President Sali Berisha near the town of Tropoje.
The Western media presented Lord Ashdown as a reliable witness of Serbian atrocities against Albanian civilians.
So Serbs now ask why no Albanian guerilla is on trial.
That he is cold and callous when discussing victims - not only Albanian, but Serbian too - Serbs tend to overlook.
Without doubt, NATO air strikes and the subsequent administration of Kosovo as a protectorate improved the political situation for Albanian Kosovars.
The recent fighting in Macedonia, which left eight police officers and 14 Albanian militants dead, raises the specter of renewed violence.
From the Serbs' perspective, attacks by Albanian nationalists were more likely the beginning of an attempt to enlarge their territory at the expense of their Christian neighbors, beginning with the weakest.
The Russian re-conquest of Crimea provides a gleeful talking point for ultra-nationalist Serbs bemoaning the loss of Albanian-majority Kosovo.
In the 1990's, following its atrocities in Bosnia, Slobodan Milosevic's Serb regime abolished Kosovo's long-standing autonomy, suppressing the rights of the province's overwhelming Albanian majority.
And Kosovo's Albanian population is clamoring for independence, while Serbia tries to postpone a decision by blocking action in the Security Council.
Yet, despite these far-reaching changes, the dynamics of the OSCE's presence have scarcely budged. Indeed, the OSCE still sticks its nose and fingers into pretty much every aspect of Albanian political life.
There is a real risk of renewed violence, though perhaps not on the scale of the 1990's. If the current negotiations on Kosovo's status fail, Albanian extremists will seek to expel the more than 100,000 Serbs who live there.
Indeed, in Albania terrorists were trained on the property of former Albanian President Sali Berisha near the town of Tropoje.
Moreover, no Albanian witness dared mention KLA crimes.

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