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Date and time of digitizing: 14:00, 3 August 2012: File change date and time: 14:00, 3 August 2012: Software used: Abbyy: Conversion program: iTextSharp 4.1.6 by 1T3XT
Pregled gramatike hrvatskosrpskog jezika (Overview of grammar of Croatoserbian language) same book reprinted in 2003. as Gramatika hrvatskoga jezika - priručnik za osnovno jezično obrazovanje - (Grammar of Croatian: Handbook for Elementary Language Education) 1967 Josip Hamm: Kratka gramatika hrvatskosrpskog književnog jezika za strance
Tomo Maretić: Gramatika i stilistika hrvatskoga ili srpskoga književnog jezika. Tomislav Maretić (13 October 1854 – 15 January 1938) was a Croatian linguist and lexicographer. [1] He was born in Virovitica, where he attended primary school and the gymnasium in Varaždin, Požega and Zagreb.
Born in Kladanj on 22 March 1958, Halilović is best known for his contribution to the standardisation of the Bosnian language.His best known works are Orthography of the Bosnian language (Pravopis bosanskog jezika), The Bosnian language (Bosanski jezik) and Grammar of the Bosnian language (Gramatika bosanskoga jezika).
Rječnik hrvatskoga jezika [Dictionary of Croatian language]. ISBN 978-953-6006-80-9 . Primarily due to political reasons as well as their professional competence, the standardized and orthographic conventions introduced and advocated by Vukovians were dominant at the end of the 19th century, and have shaped the course of the language ...
English is also widely used in media and literature, and the number of English language books published annually in India is the third largest in the world after the US and UK. [126] However, English is rarely spoken as a first language, numbering only around a couple hundred-thousand people, and less than 5% of the population speak fluent ...
Anić was born in the family of noted geologist Dragutin Anić, who had been stationed in Užice, Serbia at the time. [1] Vladimir Anić completed gymnasium in Zagreb, [2] and received a B.A. degree in Yugoslav languages and literature and Russian language and literature at the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb in 1956.
The Matica srpska (Serbian: Матица српска, Matica srpska, Latin: Matrix Serbica) [1] is the oldest Serbian language independent, non-profit, non-governmental and cultural-scientific Serbian national institution.