[
US
/ˌɫɪθəˈweɪniən/
]
ADJECTIVE
- of or relating to or characteristic of Lithuania or its people or language
NOUN
- a native or inhabitant of Lithuania
- the official language of Lithuania; belongs to the Baltic branch of Indo-European
How To Use Lithuanian In A Sentence
- Ashkenazi Jews call them kreplach, which is their Yiddish name and Lithuanians call them kolduny. Quick potato pierogi | smitten kitchen
- The Lithuanian parliament also sent an open letter to the United Nations.
- The Lithuanian parliament also sent an open letter to the United Nations.
- In 1903, at the age of sixteen, in an obscure Lithuanian shtetl, Sidney Hillman, the son of poor, Yiddish-speaking parents, joined the Bund, the Jewish socialist movement of Russia and Poland, taking as a first assignment the smuggling of his local group's hectograph from one hiding place to another. From Rebel to Bureaucrat
- Lithuanian was considered to be a barbarous language, unworthy of religious use, so Polish was used for all official religious business.
- The regency was in the hands of his mother, Helen Glinski (of Lithuanian family), until 1538, and then fell into the hands of powerful noble (boyar) families, notably the Shuiskys and Belskys. I. Russia
- Hundreds of thousands of people have crowded into the center of the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius.
- It also has leaked into the Baltic languages - zvaigzne in Latvian, žvaigždė in Lithuanian. И сонцето е ѕвезда
- Lithuanian often makes use of diminutives to soften the connotation of words or make them more personal.
- The Czechs, East Germans, Estonians, Lithuanians, Nicaraguans, Poles, and Russians who tried to dismantle their respective secret police systems had few guideposts and no precedents to follow.