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Croatie leid

Frae Wikipedia, the free beuk o knawledge
(Reguidit frae Croatian leid)
Croatie
hrvatski
Pronunciation[xř̩ʋaːtskiː]
Native taeCroatie, Bosnie an Herzegovinae, Serbia (Vojvodina), Montenegro, Romanie (Caraș-Severin Coonty), an diaspora
Native speakers
(5.6 million, includin ither dialects spoken bi Croats citit 1991–2006)[1]
Latin (Gaj's alphabet)
Yugoslav Braille
Offeecial status
Offeecial leid in
 Croatie
 Bosnie an Herzegovinae (co-offeecial)
 Serbie (in Vojvodina)
 Austrick (in Burgenland)
 European Union
Recognised minority
leid in
Regulatit biInstitute o Croatie Leid an Lingueestics
Leid codes
ISO 639-1hr
ISO 639-2hrv
ISO 639-3hrv
Glottologcroa1245[5]
Linguaspherepairt o 53-AAA-g
Tradeetional extent o Serbo-Croatie dialects in Croatie and in Bosnie an Herzegovinae
This article contains IPA phonetic seembols. Withoot proper renderin support, ye mey see quaisten merks, boxes, or ither seembols insteid o Unicode chairacters. For an introductory guide on IPA seembols, see Help:IPA.

Croatian or Croatie (hrvatski) is a Sooth Slavic leid that's tae the maist pairt uised bi Croats. It is spak bi juist ower 6.2 million fowk an as weel as bein the naitional leid o Croatie is an offeecial leid o Bosnie an Herzegovinae an aw.

Croatie leid
Croatie leid

References

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  1. a b Croatie at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. "Serbo-Croatian". Ethnologue.com. Retrieved 24 Apryle 2010.
    The official language of Croatia is Croatian (Serbo-Croatian). [...] The same language is referred to by different names, Serbian (srpski), Serbo-Croat (in Croatia: hrvatsko-srpski), Bosnian (bosanski), based on political and ethnic grounds. [...] the language that used to be officially called Serbo-Croat has gotten several new ethnically and politically based names. Thus, the names Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian are politically determined and refer to the same language with possible slight variations. ("Croatia: Language Situation", in Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2 ed., 2006.)
  3. "Národnostní menšiny v České republice a jejich jazyky" [National Minorities in Czech Republic and Their Language] (PDF) (in Czech). Government of Czech Republic. p. 2. Podle čl. 3 odst. 2 Statutu Rady je jejich počet 12 a jsou uživateli těchto menšinových jazyků: [...], srbština a ukrajinština
  4. "2011. évi CLXXIX. törvény a nemzetiségek jogairól" [Act CLXXIX/2011 on the Rights of Nationalities] (in Hungarian). Government of Hungary. 22. § (1) E törvény értelmében nemzetiségek által használt nyelvnek számít [...] a horvát
  5. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Croatian Standard". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.


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