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Serbo-Croatian language

A Wisdom Archive on Serbo-Croatian language

Serbo-Croatian language

A selection of articles related to Serbo-Croatian language

We recommend this article: Serbo-Croatian language - 1, and also this: Serbo-Croatian language - 2.
Serbo-Croatian language

ARTICLES RELATED TO Serbo-Croatian language

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology

Croatian language - Vowels. The Croatian vowel system is simple, with five long and five short vowels (all monophthongs), as well as the diphthong /ie/. Although meaningful, the difference between long and short vowels is not represented in Croatian orthography. The five vowel qualities are as follows. (A schwa /ə/ also occurs marginally.) The syllabic trill can also be either long or short, and can carry ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Transformation of ethnicity to religion its cause and course

Originally, the Islamic Ottoman Empire didn't have a concept of private ownership of land. Rights to till the land (tapija) were given to deserving military commanders (spahi), and after their death this right was delegated to another person. However, considering the special circumstances of the border-line province of Bosnia, the Ottoman sultan made an exception allowing for tapijas to be hereditary. This resulted in a de facto feudal system. Bosnian landlords (begs) quickly acquired more land than they could pos ...

See also:

Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Ethnic background of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Brief history of religions in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Transformation of ethnicity to religion its cause and course

Read more here: » Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Encyclopedia II - Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Transformation of ethnicity to religion its cause and course

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Morphology

Serbian language - Cases. There are seven cases in Serbian: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, vocative, instrumental and locative. This, in concert with a non-fixed word-order, can make Serbian difficult to learn for speakers of languages without a strong case system. In Serbian, the sentence "Anna loves Philip" can therefore variously be expressed thus: Ana voli Filipa Filipa voli Ana Ana Filipa voli Filipa Ana voli ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Morphology

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Current events

Croatian language is today the official language of the Republic of Croatia and, along with Bosnian and Serbian, one of three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina. There is no single official definition of Croatian, but there exists an Institute for Croatian language and linguistics with a prescription department. The current rules of the language are generally laid out in the grammar books and dictionaries used in education facilities, such as the school curriculum prescribed by the Ministry of Education and the univer ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Current events

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early development

The beginning of the Croatian written language can be traced to the 9th century, when Old Church Slavonic was adopted as the language of the liturgy. This language was gradually adapted to non-liturgical purposes and became known as the Croatian version of Old Slavonic. The two variants of the language, liturgical and non-liturgical, continued to be a part of the Glagolitic service as late as the mid-9th century. Until the end of the 11th century, Croatian medieval texts were written in three scripts: Latin, Glagolitic, and Bosnian Cy ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early development

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Serbian literature

Main article: Serbian literature Serbian literature emerged in the Middle Ages, and included such works as Miroslavljevo jevanđelje (The Gospel of Miroslav) in 1192 and Dušanov zakonik (Dušan's Code) in 1349. Little secular mediæval literature has been preserved, but what there is shows that it was in accord with its time; for example, Serbian Alexandride, a book about Alexander the Great, and a ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Serbian literature

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian linguistic purism - The Yugoslav period

During Yugoslav period, from 1918 to 1990, the Croatian language was subject to "unification" with the Serbian language into Serbo-Croatian Language. Opinions about the nature of that unification vary; many Croats now regard it as forced (and that assertion was one of driving forces of national awakening in 1990s). The only brief exception was in the puppet "Independent State of Croatia", 1941 to 1945, when totalitarian dictatorship of Ante Pavelić pushed purist tendencies to extremes. No Croatian dictionaries or grammars were publis ...

See also:

Croatian linguistic purism, Croatian linguistic purism - The early period, Croatian linguistic purism - The Illyrian period and Šulek's activity, Croatian linguistic purism - The Yugoslav period, Croatian linguistic purism - After Communism, Croatian linguistic purism - External link

Read more here: » Croatian linguistic purism: Encyclopedia II - Croatian linguistic purism - The Yugoslav period

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian period

But, due to the unique Croat linguistic situation, formal shaping of Croatian standard language was a process that took almost four centuries to complete: Croatian is a three dialects tongue (a somewhat simplistic way to distinguish between dialects is to refer to the pronoun what, which is ča, kaj, što in, respectively, čakavian, kajkavian and štokavian dialects) and three scripts language (Glagolitic, Croatian/Western/Bosnian Cyrillic and Latin script, with Latin script as the ultimate winner). The final obstacle t ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian period

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Trivia

Two Serbian words that are used in many of the world's languages are vampire and slivovitz (though the etymology and origin of the word vampire is disputed [1]). ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Trivia

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology

Croatian language - Vowels. The Croatian vowel system is simple, with five long and five short vowels (all monophthongs), as well as the diphthong /ie/. Although meaningful, the difference between long and short vowels is not represented in Croatian orthography. The five vowel qualities are as follows. (A schwa /ə/ also occurs marginally.) The syllabic trill can also be either long or short, and can carry ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Main article: Differences in official languages in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection

The 19th century language development overlapped with the upheavals that befell Serbian language. It was Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, an energetic and resourceful Serbian language and culture reformer, whose scriptory and orthographic stylisation of Serbian linguistic folk idiom made a radical break with the past; until his activity in the first half of the 19th century, Serbs had been using the Serbian variant of Church Slavonic and a hybrid Russian-Slavonic language. His "Serbian Dictionary", published in Vienna 1818 (along with the appende ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Phonology

Serbian language - Vowels. The Serbian vowel system is simple, with only five vowels. All vowels are monophthongs. The oral vowels are as follows: Serbian language - Consonants. The consonant system is more complicated, and its characteristic features are series of affricate and palatal consonants. As in English, voicedness is phonemic, but aspiration is not. In consonant clusters all consonants are either voiced or voiceless. All the consonants are voiced (if the last c ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Phonology

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples

Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš. Mlačna noć; u selu lavež; kasan Ćuk il netopir; Ljubav cvijeća - miris jak i strasan Slavi tajni pir. Sitni cvrčak sjetno cvrči, jasan Kao srebren vir; Teške oči sklapaju se na san, S neba rosi mir. S mrkog tornja bat Broji pospan sat, Blaga svjetlost sipi sa visina; Kroz samoću, muk, Sve je ti ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection

The 19th century language development overlapped with the upheavals that befell Serbian language. It was Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, an energetic and resourceful Serbian language and culture reformer, whose scriptory and orthographic stylisation of Serbian linguistic folk idiom made a radical break with the past; until his activity in the first half of the 19th century, Serbs had been using the Serbian variant of Church Slavonic and a hybrid Russian-Slavonic language. His "Serbian Dictionary", published in Vienna 1818 (along with the appende ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples

Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš. Mlačna noć; u selu lavež; kasan Ćuk il netopir; Ljubav cvijeća - miris jak i strasan Slavi tajni pir. Sitni cvrčak sjetno cvrči, jasan Kao srebren vir; Teške oči sklapaju se na san, S neba rosi mir. S mrkog tornja bat Broji pospan sat, Blaga svjetlost sipi sa visina; Kroz samoću, muk, Sve je ti ...

See also:

Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links

Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Phonology

Serbian language - Vowels. The Serbian vowel system is simple, with only five vowels. All vowels are monophthongs. The oral vowels are as follows: Serbian language - Consonants. The consonant system is more complicated, and its characteristic features are series of affricate and palatal consonants. As in English, voicedness is phonemic, but aspiration is not. In consonant clusters all consonants are either voiced or voiceless. All the consonants are voiced (if the last c ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Phonology

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Serbian literature

Main article: Serbian literature Serbian literature emerged in the Middle Ages, and included such works as Miroslavljevo jevandjelje (The Gospel of Miroslav) in 1192 and Dušanov zakonik (Dušan's Code) in 1349. Little secular mediæval literature has been preserved, but what there is shows that it was in accord with its time; for example, Serbian Alexandride, a book about Alexander the Great, and a ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Serbian literature

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Trivia

Two Serbian words that are used in many of the world's languages are vampire and slivovitz (though the etymology and origin of the word vampire is disputed [1]). ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Trivia

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Main article: Differences in official languages in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Serbo-Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Ethnic background of Bosnia and Herzegovina

During the Bronze Age, Bosnia was inhabited by a group of tribes we usually call Illyrians or Illyres. They were finally conquered by Roman Empire in A.D. 10. It is commonly believed that Illyrians were completely Romanized by the 4th century; they spoke Latin language and their pagan religion was first replaced by corresponding Roman myths and later they became Christians. The turmoil after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 was followed by settlement of Slavs in the 7th century. Even though modern languages of this area are ...

See also:

Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Ethnic background of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Brief history of religions in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Transformation of ethnicity to religion its cause and course

Read more here: » Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Encyclopedia II - Nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Ethnic background of Bosnia and Herzegovina




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