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The Constitution of Montenegro from 2007 states that Montenegrin is the official language of the country, while Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian and Albanian are languages in official use. [8] The Constitution states that languages in official use are those of groups that form at least 1% of the population of Montenegro, as per the 2003 population ...
This category contains articles with Montenegrin-language text. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages. This category should only be added with the {} family of templates, never explicitly.
The Declaration on the Constitutional Status of the Montenegrin Language by the Montenegrin PEN Center in 1997 was a significant document emphasizing the autonomy of the Montenegrin language. These efforts culminated in the new Montenegrin Constitution of 2007, where the Montenegrin language gained official status for the first time.
Learn to edit; Community portal ... Montenegrin language (3 C, 12 P) S. ... Pages in category "Languages of Montenegro" The following 8 pages are in this category ...
Language portal The main article for this category is Montenegrin language . For assistance with IPA transcriptions of Serbo-Croatian for Wikipedia articles, see Help:IPA/Serbo-Croatian .
The Montenegrin Cyrillic alphabet (Montenegrin: црногорска ћирилица / crnogorska ćirilica or црногорска азбука / crnogorska azbuka) is the official Cyrillic script of the Montenegrin language. It is used in parallel with the Latin script. Azbuka: А Б В Г Д Ђ Е Ж З З́ И Ј К Л Љ М Н Њ О П Р ...
Serbian, Montenegrin and Bosnian English (literal trans.) Croatian English Petru treba novac. To Peter is necessary money. Petar treba novac. Peter needs money. Ne trebaš mi. You are not necessary to me. Ne trebam te. I do not need you. Ne trebam ti. I am not necessary to you. Ne trebaš me. You do not need me. Treba da radim. It is necessary ...
The thousand-year history of the Montenegrin state begins in the 9th century with the emergence of Duklja, a vassal state of Byzantium. In those formative years, Duklja was ruled by the Vojislavljevic dynasty. In 1042, at the end of his 25-year rule, King Vojislav won a decisive battle near Bar against Byzantium, and Duklja became independent.