Санкт Петербурґ
See also: Санкт Петербург
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 Peterburg) m inan
- 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
| 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) | — |