SOME 17m people in Bosnia, Serbia, Croatia and Montenegro speak variations of what used to be called Serbo-Croatian or Croato-Serbian. Officially though, the language that once united Yugoslavia has, ...
Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian are three languages. They are not one language. They are not three "similar dialects". They are not or have ever been one language. All three, official standard languages ...
Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian are a single language: Serbo-Croat. Of course regional dialects exist, as they do in any other language, but a different dialect is not a different language. For example, ...
A declaration that Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin and Serbian are all variations of the same language has annoyed conservatives, but received a warmer welcome from the people who speak it.
Spoken by almost all of Croatia’s 4.3 million citizens, it is also one of the three official languages in neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina. Until the break-up of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, ...
An initiative launched in the Bosnian capital on March 30 by hundreds of notables and NGOs marks a major effort to bolster the consensus that Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and Montenegrins all speak the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results