The Cyrillic alphabet is ya answer
Answer:
see explanation
Explanation:
the correct form is "Maljada!ono"
Why? Well, the ending is "ada." For "ada" verbs, the ending always becomes !ono. For ada verbs, make sure not to remove "ada."
Sevi: Malikki
Monava: Malmono
Ekri: Ittrim'sa!ayaverchu||maljada!a
!ousa: Malja!ounte'tekidao|ueigu
Sevi is known for the "ikki" ending with the first three letters. Monava is known for "Kampre" which is the neutral form of the verb with the ending "a;" switching to simply "o." Ekri is known for the long words of the verb, which explain the meanings of the verb. Actually "Ittrim'sa!ayaverchu||maljada!a" itself means "Running with examples of exhaustion, heat, water, sweat loss" since he classified verbs like so.
!ousa is an animal god who changes verbs in a similar way, except likes to change the meaning of the verb. Instead of "run" it is now "walk." He is the "trick" of the animal pair (Sanj||a||a)
The consonant change for the verb to ichevatu is a to ae. So a sounds in the four verb changes become "ae" sounds. Malikki will sound like "Maelikki." In the older days, a became ae. Now, it still hasn't changed but is used less frequently.
Enjoy! Sa'am!!
4? im not sure if this question is a trick.
Answer:Los Imperios Austrohúngaro y Otomano sufrieron tensiones por que sus respectivos intereses expansionistas los confrontaron en la pelea por el territorio de la mayor parte de la actual Bosnia y parte de lo que hoy se conoce como Herzegovina.
Explanation:
En 1463, el reino de Bosnia había perdido su independencia a manos del Imperio Otomano. En 1482, Herzegovina fue ocupada por los turcos.
Cuando en 1878, el Imperio Austrohúngaro sabiendo que los otomanos ocupaban esa región, la reclamó para sí y comenzó la ocupación, dando nacimiento al Condominio austro-turco de Bosnia y Herzegovina.
El Imperio Otomano respondió intentando sabotear económica y militarmente al Imperio Austrohúngaro. Finalmente llegarían a un acuerdo con la anexión a Austria-Hungría de la provincia de Bosnia y Herzegovina en 1909.