croatian

listen to the pronunciation of croatian
Englisch - Türkisch
Hırvatça

Onlar Hırvatça, Boşnakça veya Sırpça mı konuşuyorlar? - Are they speaking in Croatian, Bosnian, or Serbian?

Hırvatçada Hırvatistan'a Hrvatska denir. - Croatia is called Hrvatska in Croatian.

{s} hırvat

Pek çok Sırp, Boşnak ve Hırvat soyadı iç le bitiyor. - Many Serbian, Bosnian, and Croatian surnames end in ić.

Sence Hırvatça ilginç bir dil mi? - Do you think Croatian is an interesting language?

i., s
(sıfat) hırvat
serbo croatian
sırp hırvat
Englisch - Englisch
An inhabitant of Croatia; a person of Croatian descent
A South Slavic language spoken in the Balkans
Of or pertaining to Croatia, the Croatian people or their language
{s} of or pertaining to Croatia (country that was formerly part of Yugoslavia)
{i} official language of Croatia
{i} citizen or resident of Croatia, person of Croatian descent
of or relating to or characteristic of Croatia or its people or language; "Croatian villages"
a member of the Slavic people living in Croatia
Of or pertaining to Croatia
a member of the Slavic people living in Croatia of or relating to or characteristic of Croatia or its people or language; "Croatian villages
A Croat
Croatian Sheepdog
A herding dog bred in Croatia
Croatian Sheepdogs
plural form of Croatian Sheepdog
Croatian.
Cr
Serbo-Croatian
A macrolanguage grouping of standard Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian language employed by ISO 639-3
Serbo-Croatian
pertaining to the [[#English|Serbo-Croatian]] language
Serbo-Croatian
The standard language of Yugoslavia, in which Serbian and Croatian languages were considered as a unit (as "Eastern variant" and "Western variant" respectively), and in which Bosnian language did not exist
Serbo-Croatian
An umbrella term for all the Slavic dialects spoken in nowadays Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro; in dialectology commonly referred to as Central South Slavic diasystem
Croatians
plural of Croatian
Serbo-Croatian language
South Slavic language spoken by some 21 million people in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Serbia and Montenegro. As the dominant language of pre-1991 Yugoslavia, it was used or understood by most ethnic groups of the federation. The Central Neo-Shtokavian dialect forms the basis for both Standard Serbian and Standard Croatian. Historically, Serbia's literary language was the Serbian recension of Church Slavonic (see Old Church Slavonic language). In the 19th century a new literary language based on colloquial Serbian was successfully promulgated by Vuk Stefanovi Karadi. Croatian written in the Latin alphabet first appears in the mid-14th century. In the 19th century the Zagreb-based Illyrian political movement, which aimed at a union of all South Slavs, turned to the Central Neo-Shtokavian dialect as the basis for a literary language that would unite Croatians and bring them closer to their Slavic compatriots. The move toward a unified "Serbo-Croatian" was supported by the politically unified Yugoslav kingdom (1918-41) and communist Yugoslavia (1945-91). With the independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992, a Bosnian form of the language was recognized of necessity. Vocabulary and pronunciation differences exist among the three but form no real barrier to communication. The Croats and Bosnians use the Roman, or Latin, alphabet; the Serbs and Montenegrins of present-day Serbia and Montenegro use Cyrillic. Most Bosnians, Serbs, and Croats insist that their language is distinct from the others, and, perhaps, from a political perspective this is understandable; but most linguists consider Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian a single language, which has historically been called Serbo-Croatian
serbo croatian
serbo croat, Slavic language of the Serbs and Croats
croatian

    Silbentrennung

    Cro·a·tian

    Türkische aussprache

    krōeyşın

    Aussprache

    /krōˈāsʜən/ /kroʊˈeɪʃən/
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