Examples of using Denko in English and their translations into Serbian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Latin
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Cyrillic
Denko is useless.
His name is Liebe Denko.
Denko, where have you been?
Think she can nail Denko?
Denko, prepare something to eat.
I'm here to see Liebe Denko.
Uri Denko's hurt a lot of people.
Excuses are like buttholes, Denko.
Nikolai Denko has been charged with the murder of Gabriella Tucker.
Simon's real name is Nikolai Denko.
Mr. Ostrovsky had refused to make Mr. Denko a partner in his diamond importing business.
Except the son of a bitch tipping off Denko.
In 2015, Nitto Denko Corporation of Japan revealed their development of a new approach to sintering neodymium magnet product.
His given name was Mladen(Младен),[1][2] Denko being a diminutive.
In 2015, Nitto Denko Corporation of Japan announced their development of a new method of sintering neodymium magnet material.
Look, we've been working with the Joint Task Force for three years, trying to track Denko down.
In 1860 ikonom Dimitrije and Denko Krstić were called to a hearing in Skopje by the Grand Vizier Mehmed Pasha Kibrizli, to be hanged, but paid for their release.[9].
You got involved because you are strong and you are brave, andyou are tired of running from men like Denko.
More recently a cheaper single-stage conversion of ethylene to acetic acid was commercialised by chemical company Showa Denko, which opened an ethylene oxidation plant in Ōita, Japan, in 1997.
Denko Krstić(Serbian Cyrillic: Денко Крстић, Macedonian: Денко Крстиќ; September 1824- 1882) was a merchant from Kumanovo and Ottoman Serb activist.[1] He was one of the most influential in Kumanovo during his time,[2] and a wealthy man.[3].
Barrot's office tried to pass the comment off as lapsus linguae, or a slip of the tongue, but most Macedonians seem to disagree,including former Foreign Affairs minister Denko Malevski, who interpreted it as a strategic jab.
According to Denko Malevski, a former Macedonian foreign minister and UN ambassador, Greece"wants a fast solution, fearing complication after the recognition of the Republic of Macedonia's constitutional name by Canada" and other states.
In 1843 he was briefly a teacher of Church Slavonic and Serbian in Kumanovo, using textbooks from Belgrade.[6][7] One of his students was Tasa Civković, a later Ottoman Serb patron.[3] In the period of 1847-51, the Church of St. Nicholas in Kumanovo was built by the ktitors: ikonom priest Dimitrije,Krsto Puto and his son Denko Krstić, priest Neša, Hadži-Stojilković, and the families of Rikačovci, Šapkalijanci, Borozani and Stojanćeajini.