Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marinković, M. (2010). "Srpski jezik u Osmanskom carstvu: primer četvorojezičnog udžbenika za učenje stranih jezika iz biblioteke sultana Mahmuda I". Slavistika. XIV. Marojević, R. (1996). "Srpski jezik u porodici slovenskih jezika" [The Serbian language in the family of Slavic languages]. Srpski jezik [The Serbian language]: 1– 2.
Serbian Cyrillic is in official use in Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. [2] Although Bosnia "officially accept[s] both alphabets", [2] the Latin script is almost always used in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, [2] whereas Cyrillic is in everyday use in Republika Srpska.
Three out of four standard variants have the same set of 30 regular phonemes, so the Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian Latin and Serbian Cyrillic alphabets map one to one with one another and with the phoneme inventory, while Montenegrin alphabet has 32 regular phonemes, the additional two being Ś and Ź .
She has published five books, Pridevi sa značenjem ljudskih osobina u savremenom srpskom jeziku (2000), Leksikologija srpskog jezika (2007, 2010), [2] Verbalne asocijacije kroz srpski jezik i kulturu (2010), [3] Leksikologija i gramatika u skoli (2012) and Srpska leksika u prošlosti i danas(2018).
Jazić, Đorđe (1977), Osnovi fonetike ruskog jezika: ruski glasovni sistem u poređenju sa srpskohrvatskim, Beograd: Naučna knjiga Jovanović Maldoran, Srđan (2014). "Prilog izučavanju akcenatskog kvaliteta i kvantiteta srpske varijante policentričnog srpskohrvatskog jezika" [To the study of Accentual Quality and Quantity of Serbian ...
Gramatika i stilistika hrvatskoga ili srpskoga književnog jezika, Kugli, 700 pp., Zagreb, 1899 I. S. Turgenjev u hrvatskim i srpskim prijevodima, JAZU, 113 pp., Zagreb, 1904 Rječnik hrvatskoga ili srpskoga jezika: edited in multiple occasions more than 5 300 pages
Operativna gramatika srpskohrvatskog jezika (1987) [6] Rečenička melodija u srpskohrvatskom jeziku (1983) [7] Linguistic Habilitation for Hearing Impaired (1977) [7] A Short Outline of Telugu Phonetics (1977) [8] A Short Outline of Bengali Phonetics (1972) [9] Do nemogučeg (1972) [10] Bengali Speech Sounds for Hearing-Ilmapired Children ...
Serbia has only one nationwide official language, which is Serbian.The largest other languages spoken in Serbia include Hungarian, Bosnian and Croatian.The Autonomous Province of Vojvodina has 6 official languages: Serbian, Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian, Croatian, Rusyn; whilst Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija, which Serbia claims as its own, has two: Albanian and Serbian.