Likewise, people ask, can Serbians understand Russian?
Generally we understand Russian better than they understand Croatian/Serbian, but even that on a very, very basic level. However, after a year or two you start "cathing up" with Russian, recognizing some old roots, archaic words from our language or vice versa and putting it all together etc.
One may also ask, are Russia and Serbia brothers? Serbia and Russia are both predominantly Slavic and Eastern Orthodox countries. Due to sharing a strong and privilege relationship, the relationship between Serbia and Russia is often coined as Russo–Serbian brotherhood, which both referred itself brother to brother.
Beside above, what languages are spoken in Serbia?
Serbian
What is the closest language to Serbian?
The closest languages are Croatian, Macedonian, Bulgarian and Slovenian. Russian is kind of close but not so much. There are some main differences in accent (Serbians speak with a hard accent and we generally speak very fast), grammar etc.