最終更新日:2022/12/24
Yet there still remained non-Magyar speakers in the country. Germans, representing around 7 percent of the total population (approximately half a million individuals), were the largest non-Magyar group after the departure of the Romanians and Slovaks. These Germans were essentially the so-called Swabians who had arrived in the eighteenth century. (The Transylvanian Saxons were now in Romania, the Zipser Germans in Czechoslovakia, and the Swabians of the Banat were divided between Romania and Yugoslavia.)
音声機能が動作しない場合はこちらをご確認ください
編集履歴(0)
元となった例文
Yet
there
still
remained
non-Magyar
speakers
in
the
country.
Germans,
representing
around
7
percent
of
the
total
population
(approximately
half
a
million
individuals),
were
the
largest
non-Magyar
group
after
the
departure
of
the
Romanians
and
Slovaks.
These
Germans
were
essentially
the
so-called
Swabians
who
had
arrived
in
the
eighteenth
century.
(The
Transylvanian
Saxons
were
now
in
Romania,
the
Zipser
Germans
in
Czechoslovakia,
and
the
Swabians
of
the
Banat
were
divided
between
Romania
and
Yugoslavia.)