Anagrammer & Oplysninger om | engelsk ord ZENATI


ZENATI

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Eksempler på brug af ZENATI i en sætning

  • Blench (ms, 2006) lists the following as separate languages, with dialects in parentheses; like Ethnologue, he classifies Nafusi as Eastern Zenati.
  • Shenwa, also spelt Chenoua (native name: Haqbaylit̠), is a Zenati Berber language spoken on Mount Chenoua (Jebel Chenoua) in Algeria, just west of Algiers, and in the provinces of Tipaza (including the town of Cherchell) and Chlef.
  • The Mzab–Wargla languages or Northern Saharan oasis dialects are a dialect cluster of the Zenati languages, within the Northern Berber subbranch.
  • Riffian is a Zenati Berber language which consists of various sub-dialects specific to each clan and of which a majority are spoken in the Rif region, a large mountainous area of Northern Morocco, and a minority spoken in the western part of neighbouring Algeria.
  • French linguist Edmond Destaing in 1915 proposed "Zenati" as a loose subgrouping within the Northern Berber languages, including Riffian Berber in northeastern Morocco and Shawiya Berber in northeastern Algeria.
  • They speak primarily the Mozabite language, one of the Zenati languages in the Berber branch of the Afroasiatic family.
  • Some Riffians today have these tribe names (Sanhadjan Rif, as a result of the later Zenati integration into this branch of the Sanhaja under the Almohads).
  • The local language of the Mozabites is Mozabite (Tumẓabt), a branch of the Zenati group of Berber languages.
  • Mozabite (endonym: tamazight), also known as Mzab, Tumẓabt or Ghardaia, is a Zenati language spoken by the Mozabites, an Ibadi Berber group inhabiting the seven cities of the M'zab natural region in the northern Saharan Algeria.
  • Božidar Maljković Željko Obradović Oļģerts Altbergs Valdemārs Baumanis Raimonds Karnītis Semen Khalipski Dimitar Mitev Ivan Galabov Valerio Bianchini Witold Zagórski Ludwik Miętta Vydas Gedvilas Joë Jaunay Nikos Nissiotis Julio Toro Zmago Sagadin Dan Peterson/ David Blatt Tayeb Abdelhadi Kaddour Bilekdar Tayeb Zenati Mohamed Adel Tlatli Rizk Waheed Al-Masri Rateb Sheikh Najeeb Fawzi Asker Dawood Ghazi Talib Mehran Shahintab.
  • Tugurt, also known as Oued Righ Berber and Temacine Tamazight, is a Zenati Berber variety spoken in some of the oases of the northeastern Oued Righ region around Touggourt in Algeria.
  • The Zwawa participated in several battles for the Fatimid Caliphate, alongside their neighbors and blood brothers, notably in the siege of the fortress of Kiana (in the vicinity of the Qalaa of the Beni Hammad) against Abu Yazid, in which the Fatimids succeeded in taking the fortress and defeating the Zenati Kharijites and Nekkarites.
  • Despite the fact that they are mutually intelligible with neighbouring Central Atlas Tamazight dialects and are generally classified among them, these dialects actually belong to the Zenati languages and are intermediate dialects between the Riffian and Atlas languages.
  • He has successfully collaborated with the following artists: Vadim Brodski (violin, Italy), Nikolai Demidienko (piano, Russia), Pavlina Dokovska (piano, SAD), Maria Baranowska (violin, Poland), Georgios Demertzis, (violin, Greek), Neal Larrabee (piano, SAD), Massimo Giorgi (double bass, Italy), Micho Dimitrov, (violin, Bulgaria), Andrei Nikolsky, (piano, Russia), Boris Pamukdžijev (oboe, Bulgaria), Ivan Zenati (violin, Tscheh), Konstantin Bogino (piano, Paris), Igor Lazko (piano, Paris), Vladimir Krpan (piano, Croatia) Jovan Kolundžija (violin, Serbia), Ksenija Janković (cello, Germany), Sreten Krstic (violin, Germany), Natasa Veljkovic (piano, Austria), Stefan Milenković (violin, SAD), Jasminka Stancul (piano, Austria), Rita Kinka (piano, Serbia), Aleksandar Madžar (Belgium), Darko Veličkovski (SAD), Dejan Bravnitschar (violin, Slovenia), Radmila Bakočevich (soprano, Serbia), Radmila Smiljanic (soprano, Serbia), Ruža Pospiš Baldani (mezzo-soprano, Croatia), Vladimir Ruzdjak (baritone, Croatia), Gertruda Munitich (soprano, Bosnia-Herzegovina), Jadranka Jovanovic (mezzo-soprano, Serbia), Milena Kitic (mezzo-soprano, SAD), Irena Zaric (mezzo-soprano SAD), Boris Trajanov (baritone, Germany) Gordana Jevtovich (soprano, Serbia), Dunja Simich (soprano, Germany), Jovo Reljin (tenor, Swiss), Slobodan Stankovich (baritone, Swiss), Dubravka Zubovich (mezzo-soprano, SAD), Nikola Mitich (baritone, Serbia), Oliver Njego (baritone, Serbia), Ištvan Varga (cello, Serbia), Ivan Dinich (piano, Serbia), Aleksandar Sandorov (piano, Serbia), Dejan Sinadinovich (piano, Serbia), Dubravka Jovičich (piano, Serbia), Maja Jokanovich (violin, Serbia), Ilija Marinkovich (violin, Vienna), Nemanja Radulovich (violin, Paris), Nenad Lečich (Köln), Ognjen Popovich (clarinet, Serbia), Lidija Bizjak (piano Paris), Sanja Bizjak (piano, Paris).



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