Санкт Петербурґ

Pannonian Rusyn

Etymology

Borrowed from Serbo-Croatian Санкт Петербург / Sankt Peterburg, from Russian Санкт-Петербург (Sankt-Peterburg), from German Sankt Peterburg.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈsaŋkt pɛˈtɛrburk]
  • Rhymes: -ɛrburk
  • Hyphenation: Санкт Пе‧тер‧бурґ

Proper noun

Санкт Петербурґ (Sankt Peterburgm inan

  1. Saint Petersburg (a federal city of Russia, known between 1914 and 1924 as Petrograd and between 1924 and 1991 as Leningrad; the former capital of Russia, from 1713–1728 and 1732–1918)
    Synonym: (historical) Ленїнґрад (Lenjingrad)
    • 2025 May 21, В. Вуячич, “На нєшкайши дзень, 21. май”, in Руске Слово[1]:
      1831 – До Беоґраду принєшена державна друкарня зоз Санкт Петербурґу.
      1831 – Do Beogradu prinješena deržavna drukarnja zoz Sankt Peterburgu.
      1831 – The state printing house from Saint Petersburg was brought to Belgrade.

Declension

Declension of Санкт Петербурґ (Sankt Peterburg)
singular plural
nominative Санкт Петербурґ (Sankt Peterburg)
genitive Санкт Петербурґу (Sankt Peterburgu)
dative Санкт Петербурґу (Sankt Peterburgu)
accusative Санкт Петербурґ (Sankt Peterburg)
instrumental Санкт Петербурґом (Sankt Peterburgom)
locative Санкт Петербурґу (Sankt Peterburgu)
vocative Санкт Петербурґу (Sankt Peterburgu)