Talk:Balto-Slavic languages/Serbo-Croatian controversy
Serbo-Croatian
editthese are the introducing paragraphs of the article Serbo-Croatian
Serbo-Croatian, Croato-Serbian, or Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS)[1] (Srpskohrvatski, Hrvatskosrpski, or Bosanski/Hrvatski/Srpski, Cyrillic script: Cрпскохрватски, Xрватскосрпски), is a South Slavic language or diasystem. The term Serbo-Croatian is and has been used both as an umbrella term for all the dialects spoken in what is nowadays Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and more importantly, as the official standard language of Yugoslavia from 1954 to 1990 (partially along with Slovene and Macedonian).
In its standardized form, it was based on the Neoštokavian subdialect of the Štokavian dialect system, and defined in Ekavian and Ijekavian literary variants, called "pronunciations". Unofficially, there were "Eastern" (based on the Serbian idiom) and "Western" (based on the Croatian and Bosnian idiom) literary variants, that eventuSally served as a basis for standard languages. By extension, Kajkavian and Čakavian dialects were often considered to be dialects of the Serbo-Croatian (while the Torlakian dialect was never recognized in mainstream linguistics), but they were not in official use.
With the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, its languages followed suit and Croatian, Serbian, and Bosnian became separate standard languages (Ausbausprachen); see differences between standard Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian. Currently, there is a movement to create a Montenegrin language, separating it from Serbian. Conversely, the term "Serbo-Croatian" declined in use, first from official documents and gradually from linguistic literature.
Today, use of the term "Serbo-Croatian" is controversial due to history, politics, and the variable meanings of the word language. Linguists are divided on questions regarding whether the use of the name should be deprecated. It is still used, for lack of a more succinct alternative, to denote the "daughter" languages as a collectivity. An alternative name has emerged abroad – Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS), when referring to the same dialectal base (stylised Neoštokavian) used for all the Serbo-Croatian standard languages. In the regional dialectology, the term Central South Slavic diasystem is sometimes used as a collective term, when discussing the intensive mutual influence of Serbo-Croatian dialects in the historical period. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Cantabo07 (talk • contribs) 00:34, 13 January 2010 (UTC)
- Your point exactly...? Be concise and to-the-point, otherwise you're likely to get ignored like that suck-puppeteering "Gotho-Baltic" supremacist loon above you. --Ivan Štambuk (talk) 04:44, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
- I agree with the last paragrpah, that the term "Serbo-Croatian" is controversial. Therefore I question the use of that term in the article. My personal opinion - which is not important to the article itself - is that the language serbo-croatian is a constructed language like Indonesian based on old-malay and modern-standard-arabic based on classical-arabic. Now that Yugoslavia doesn't exist anymore the once constructed Standard Serbo-Croatian isn't used anymore. Now we have three Standard varieties of the language, namely Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian... therefore with the break up of Yugoslavia Serbo-Croatian became a Diasystem. Further it is interesting that the Diasystem Czech-Sloavk is hardly named as a language anywhere, but Serbo-Croatian nearley everywhere. Therefore, in my opinion, the use of the term "Serbo-Croatian" should be questioned everywhere. Cantabo07 (talk) 21:09, 17 January 2010 (UTC)
- P.S. I don't need instructions how to comment and how to discuss, I am no kid ;-) Further I don't care if my contribution is going to be ignored or not. Those who pay attention are welcome to discuss, those who want to ignore it, shall do so and live in peace. Cantabo07 (talk) 21:15, 17 January 2010 (UTC)
- There is no such thing as "Croatian language", "Bosnian language", "Serbian language" or "Montenegrin language" - these are fabrications invented in the 1990s (and Montengerin more recently in the 2000s) by nationalists who are ashamed by the fact that their "enemies" appear to be speaking exactly the same language that they do. Indeed there is a controversy to the term Serbo-Croatian - but only in the nationalist circles. The rest of the world doesn't care. Most, if not all, modern historical linguistics publications in English language still abundantly use the term, and I assure you that their respective authors have no intention of changing their mind. Look up the works of Derksen, Kortlandt, Jasanoff, Dybo and other notable living and dead Balto-Slavists - it's Serbo-Croatian absolutely everywhere. To the extent this article is interested, the Neoštokovian dialectal basis preserving the mobile paradigms of PBSl. - it's absurd that we clone 1 column into 4 identical ones just to satisfy some nationalist egos.
- It's amusing to see Croatian fundamentalist hallucinating that Serbo-Croatian language has something to do with Yugoslavia. Serbo-Croatian language was standardized more than century and a half ago, long before either Yugoslavia existed. Why do you conveniently ignore that historical fact? The practice of usage of that term has 2 centuries of continuous tradition in Slavicist circles.
- The "Serbo-Croatian diasystem" aka "Central South Slavic language" exists solely in the head of the Brozović and his nationalist cronies who perpetually hallucinate about it striving to establish it as a politically more correct replacement for the term Serbo-Croatian. The notion of it was completely refuted by several linguists, most recently and most notably by Matasović 2008, see Poredbenopovijesna gramatika hrvatskoga jezika p. 64ff.
- Czech-Slovak? Don't be silly, the differences between those two are 100 times more extensive than between modern-day standards of B/C/S. --Ivan Štambuk (talk) 21:27, 22 January 2010 (UTC)
Serbian language and Croatian language are only two versions of a SAME language, nothing else.
editThese are illustrated in the following table:
South Slavic | West Slavic | East Slavic | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Late Proto-slavic reconstruction | Late Proto-Slavic meaning | Old Church Slavonic | Slovenian | Croatian | Serbian | Bulgarian | Macedonian | Czech | Slovak | Polish | Belarusian | Russian | Ukrainian |
*gvězda | star | звѣзда | zvezda | zvijezda | ѕвезда | звезда | ѕвезда | hvězda | hviezda | gwiazda | зорка | звезда | звізда |
*květъ | flower, bloom | цвѣтъ | cvet | cvijet | цвет | цвете | цвет | květ | kvet | kwiat | кветка | цвет | квітка |
*tisošta | tisošta | тысѫшта | tisoč | tisuća | хиљада | хиляда | илјада | tisíc | tisíc | tysiąc | тисяча | тысяча | тисяча |
Example of translation into English language ( the 'croatian' table doesn't reflect the real language spoken by croatian people, but is only a definitelly unsuccessful attempt to change some words by the weird 'rules' that are only present in the heads of the nationalists. The 'serbian' table represents the language that's really spoken and written by the vaste majority of the people in Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia.)1
editEnglish | Croatian | Serbian |
---|---|---|
English language: With regard to the general air quality in the city of Jerusalem is necessary to take urgent security measures to prevent poisoning of the population of the exhaust gases.
Potential application mijera that affect the flow of personal health status and which may contribute to better overall care of the population in the area of the city center would certainly be to reduce traffic stopper on fundamental Kostanjica where intersections are located tourist islands, such as the Christian church, these disciplinary measures are proposed primarily in the holiday season such as Easter and Christmas. Officers and NCOs from the army barracks in the city should contribute to the precise use of the prescribed measures, surveillance of traffic chaos at the check point and looking through use of aviation. |
Croatian language: Glede opće kvalitete zraka u gradu Jeruzalemu potrebito je poduzeti žurne mjere sigurnosti kako bismo spriječili trovanje pučanstva ispušnim plinovima.
Možebitna primjena mijera koje utjeću na tijek osobnoga zdravstvenoga stanja a koje mogu pridonjeti boljoj općoj skrbi pučanstva na prostoru gradskoga središta svakako bi bilo smanjenje prometnoga čepa na bitnim raskrižjima gdije su smješteni turistički otoci, poput kršćanskih crkvi, ove stegovne mjere predlažu se ponajprije u vrijeme blagdana kao što su Uskrs i Božić. Časnici i dočasnici iz vojarni u gradu trebaju pridonjeti točnoj uporabi propisanih mjera, nadzorom prometnoga kaosa na nadzornim točkama i promatranjem kroz uporabu zrakoplovstva. |
Serbian language:
У погледу опште квалитета ваздуха у граду Јерусалиму потребно је да се предузму хитне мере безбедности како би спречили отровање становништва издувним гасовима. Евентуална примена мера које утичу на ток личног здравственог стања које могу да допринесу бољем општем збрињавању становништва на простору градског центра свакако би била смањење саобраћајног колапса на суштинским раскрсницама где су смештена туристичка острва, попут хришћанских цркава, ове дисциплинске мере предлажу се најпре у време празника као шта су Васкрс и Божић. Официри и подофицири из касарни у граду треба да допринесу тачној употреби прописаних мера, контролом саобраћајног хаоса на контролним тачкама и посматрањем преко употребе ваздухопловства.
(U pogledu opšte kvaliteta vazduha u gradu Jerusalimu potrebno je da se preduzmu hitne mere bezbednosti kako bi sprećili otrovanje stanovništva izduvnim gasovima. Eventualna primena mera koje utiću na tok ličnog zdravstvenog stanja koje mogu da doprinesu boljem opštem zbrinjavanju stanovništva na prostoru gradskog centra svakako bi bila smanjenje saobračajnog kolapsa na suštinskim raskrsnicama gde su smeštena turistička ostrva, poput hrišćanskih crkava, ove disciplinske mere predlažu se najpre u vreme praznika kao šta su Vaskrs i Božić. Oficiri i podoficiri iz kasarni u gradu treba da doprinesu tačnoj upotrebi propisanih mera, kontrolom saobračajnog haosa na kontrolnim tačkama i posmatranjem preko upotrebe vazduhoplovstva.) |
Example of translation into different languages 2
editCroatian | Bosnian | Serbian | English |
---|---|---|---|
Bijela sol za kuhanje kemijski je spoj natrija i klora. | Bijela so za kuhanje je hemijski spoj natrijuma i hlora. | Bela so za kuvanje je hemijsko jedinjenje natrijuma i hlora. | White salt for cooking is a chemical compound of sodium and chlorine. |
Vlak sa željezničkoga kolodvora krenut će točno u deset sati. | Voz sa željezničke stanice krenut će tačno u deset sati. | Voz sa železničke stanice krenuće tačno u deset sati/časova. | The train station will start exactly at ten o'clock. |
Different phonetics 1
editFeature | Croatian | Serbian | English |
---|---|---|---|
Opposition -u/e | burza | berza | stock-exchange |
porculan | porcelan | porcelain | |
Opposition -u/i | tanjur | tanjir | plate |
Opposition -l/-o after o | sol | so | salt |
vol | vo | ox | |
kolčić | kočić | stick | |
Serbian often drops letter H in the initial and medial position: |
čahura | čaura | cartridge |
hrvač | rvač | wrestler | |
hrđa | rđa | rust |
Different phonetics 2
editCroatian language | Latin | altgriechische Aussprache | Gerk alphabet|griech. Buchstabe | byzantinische Aussprache | Serbian language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
b | b | [b] | β | [v] | v |
e | e | [ɛː] | η | [i] | i |
k oder c | c | [k] | κ | [k] | k |
u | u | [u̯] | υ (nach Vokal) | [v] | v |
k oder h | ch | [kʰ] | χ | [x] | h |
Different morphology
editExample 1:
English | Croatian | Serbian |
---|---|---|
add by pouring* | dolijevati | dolivati* |
diarrhea | proljev | proliv |
gulf, bay | zaljev | zaliv |
to influence | utjecati | uticati |
Example 2:
English | Serbian | Croatian |
---|---|---|
tobacco | duvan | duhan |
to cook | kuvati | kuhati |
dry | suvo | suho |
deaf | gluvo | gluho |
Example 3:
English | Bosnian | Croatian | Serbian |
---|---|---|---|
point | tačka | točka | tačka |
correct | tačno | točno | tačno |
municipality | općina | općina | opština |
priest | svećenik | svećenik | sveštenik |
male student | student | student | student |
female student | studentica | studentica | studentkinja |
male professor | profesor | profesor | profesor |
female professor | profesorica | profesorica | profesorka |
scientist | naučnik | znanstvenik | naučnik |
translator | prevodilac | prevoditelj | prevodilac |
reader | čitalac | čitatelj | čitalac |
diver | ronilac | ronilac (sometimes: ronitelj) |
ronilac |
Different internationalisms
editExample different:
English | Bosnian | Croatian | Serbian |
---|---|---|---|
to organise | organizirati organizovati |
organizirati | organizovati |
to construct | konstruisati konstruirati |
konstruirati | konstruisati |
But: | |||
to analyse | analizirati | analizirati | analizirati |
Different historically 1
edithttp://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/ward_1912/ottoman_empire_europe_1792.jpg
Historically, modern age internationalisms entered Bosnian and Croatian mostly through German and Italian, while Serbian received them through French and Russian, so different localisation patterns were established based on those languages. Also, Greek borrowings came to Serbian directly, but through Latin into Croatian:
English | Croatian | Serbian | Note |
---|---|---|---|
Bethlehem | Betlehem | Vitlejem | Through Latin in Croatian, through Greek in Serbian |
Athens | Atena | Atina | |
Europe | Europa | Evropa | |
Cyprus | Cipar | Kipar | |
chlorine | klor | hlor | |
impedance | impedanca | impedansa | Through French in Serbian |
But: | |||
licence | licenca | licenca | "dozvola" is more common in both languages |
Most of chemical element names are different: for international names, Bosnian and Croatian use -ij where Serbian has -ijum (uranij–uranijum). In some native names, Bosnian and Croatian have -ik where Serbian has -(o)nik (kisik–kiseonik(oxygen), vodik–vodonik(hydrogen)). Yet others are totally different (dušik–azot (nitrogen), kositar–kalaj (tin)). Some are the same: srebro (silver), zlato (gold), bakar (copper).
Various dictionary
editEnglish | In Serbia | In Croatia | In Bosnia |
---|---|---|---|
one thousand | hiljada | tisuća | hiljada |
January[2] | januar | siječanj | januar |
factory | fabrika | tvornica | fabrika tvornica |
rice | pirinač | riža | riža |
carrot | šargarepa | mrkva | mrkva |
trousers | pantalone | hlače | hlače |
bread | hleb | kruh | hljeb |
spinach | spanać | špinat | špinat |
football | fudbal | nogomet | fudbal |
train | voz | vlak | voz |
wave | talas | val | talas |
person | lice | osoba | lice osoba |
uncivil | nevaspitan | neodgojen | neodgojen |
one's own | sopstveno | vlastito | vlastito sopstveno |
road[3] | put drum |
cesta put |
put džada |
road toll | drumarina putarina |
cestarina | putarina |
dad | tata | tata ćaća |
tata babo |
tomato | paradajz | rajčica | paradajz |
English | Serbian | Croatian | Bosnian |
---|---|---|---|
to accept | prihvatati | prihvaćati | prihvatati |
happy, lucky | srećan | sretan | sretan srećan |
to comprehend | shvatati | shvaćati | shvatati |
Names of the months
editIn the Croatian language months have Slavic names, while Serbian and Bosnian use the same set of international Latin-derived names as English. But Slavic names may also be used in the Bosnian language as well (although, rarely understood); Latin-derived names are preferred.
English | Croatian | Serbian | Bosnian |
---|---|---|---|
January | siječanj | januar | januar |
February | veljača | februar | februar |
March | ožujak | mart | mart |
April | travanj | april | april |
May | svibanj | maj | maj |
June | lipanj | jun | juni |
July | srpanj | jul | juli |
August | kolovoz | avgust | august |
September | rujan | septembar | septembar |
October | listopad | oktobar | oktobar |
November | studeni | novembar | novembar |
December | prosinac | decembar | decembar |
Example of other differences 1
editCroatian | Bosnian | Serbian | German |
---|---|---|---|
William Shakespeare | William Shakespeare | Vilijam Šekspir oder Вилијам Шекспир | William Shakespeare |
München | Minhen | Minhen oder Минхен | München |
Zürich | Zürich | Cirih oder Цирих | Zürich |
Bruxelles | Brisel | Brisel oder Брисел | Brüssel, frz. Bruxelles |
New York | New York | Njujork oder Њујорк | New York |
SZO oder WHO | WHO | SZO oder СЗО | WHO |
Example of other differences 2
editCroatian | Bosnian | Serbian | German |
---|---|---|---|
Dobar tek! (kajkav.) oder U slast! | Prijatno! | Guten Appetit! | |
tjedan (kajkav.) | sedmica, hevta (türk.) | nedelja (kirchenslaw.), sedmica | Woche |
sat (türk.) | sat, sahat (türk.) | čas (in dieser Bed. aus dem Russ.),[4] sat (türk.) |
Stunde |
otok | ostrvo | ostrvo | Insel |
vrt | bašča | bašta | Garten |
vlak (tschech.) | voz | Zug | |
kruh | hljeb, somun (türk.) | hleb | Brot |
talijanski | italijanski | italienisch | |
nitko; svatko | niko; svako | niemand; jeder |
Example of other differences 3
editCroatian | Bosnian | Serbian | German |
---|---|---|---|
Španjolska | Španija | Spanien | |
priopćiti | saopćiti | saopštiti | mitteilen |
spol | pol | Geschlecht |
Same languages: here's a list of synonims that can be used in both variants of the Serbo-Croatian language.
editEnglis | Croatian | Serbian |
---|---|---|
Compare | Usporedba | Поређење (Poređenje) |
Europe | Europa | Европа (Evropa) |
Netherlands | Nizozemska | Холандија (Holandija) |
Italians | Talijani | Италијани (Italijani) |
Universe | Svemir | Васиона (Vasiona) |
Spine | Kralježnica | Кичма (Kičma) |
Air | Zrak | Ваздух (Vazduh) |
Education | Odgoj | Васпитање (Vaspitanje) |
Week | Tjedan | Седмица (Sedmica) |
History | Povijest | Историја (Istorija) |
Pantaloons | Hlače | Панталоне (Pantalone) |
Belly | Trbuh | Стомак (Stomak) |
Science | Znanost | Наука (Nauka) |
Personally | Osobno | Лично (Lično) |
Persona | Osoba | Лице (Lice) |
United Nations | Ujedinjeni Narodi | Уједињене Нације (Ujedinjene Nacije) |
Bread | Kruh | Хлеб (Hleb) |
Artificial | Umjetno | Вештачки (Veštački) |
Cross | Križ | Крст (Krst) |
Democracy | Demokracija | Демократија (Demokratija) |
Detection | Spoznaja | Сазнање (Saznanje) |
Island | Otok | Острво (Ostrvo) |
Officer | Časnik | Официр (Oficir) |
Road traffic | Cestovni promet | Друмски саобраћај (Drumski saobraćaj) |
Autobahn | Autocesta | Аутопут (Autoput) |
Length | Duljina | Дужина (Dužina) |
Association | Udruga | Удружење (Udruženje) |
Factory | Tvornica | Фабрика (Fabrika) |
General | Opće | Опште (Opšte) |
Christ | Krist | Христoс (Hristos) |
I'm sorry | Oprosti | Извини (Izvini) |
Geography | Zemljopis | Географија (Geografija) |
Week | Tjedan | Седмица (Sedmica) |
January | Siječanj | Јануар (Januar) |
Passport | Putovnica | Пасош (Pasoš) |
Retirees | Umirovljenici | Пензионери (Penzioneri) |
Security Council | Vijeće sigurnosti | Савјет безбједности (Savet bezbednosti) |
Outdoor | Vanjski | Спољашњи (Spoljašnji) |
Own | Vlastito | Сопствено (Sopstveno) |
Level | Razina | Ниво (Nivo) |
Press | Tisak | Штампа (Štampa) |
Worker | Djelatnik | Радник (Radnik) |
Decade, century, millennium | Desetljeće stoljeće tisućljeće | Деценија, век, миленијум (Decenija, vek, milenijum) |
Communication | Priopćenje | Саопштење |
Native language standard | Materinski jezićni standard | Матерњи језички стандард |
Same alphabet letters
edithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Scripts_in_Europe_(1901).jpg
- Croatian alphabet (30 letters): A B C Č Ć D Dž Đ E F G H I J K L Lj M N Nj O P R S Š T U V Z Ž
- Serbian scripts (30 letters): A B C Č Ć D Dž Đ E F G H I J K L Lj M N Nj O P R S Š T U V Z Ž or А Б В Г Д Ђ Е Ж З И Ј К Л Љ М Н Њ О П РС Т Ћ У Ф Х Ц Ч Џ Ш
- Bosnian letter (30 letters): A B V G D Đ E Ž Z I J K L Lj M N Nj O P R S T Ć U F H C Č Dž Š
Map of standard language „Central south Slavic“
edithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5a/Europe_linguistic_map_1907.JPG (Languages in Europe 1900-...) http://haven.apolyton.net/maps/Europe/europe1800_1850c_lang.jpg (Language in Europe 1800-1900)
Map of various national dialects and subdialects in mix subdialects
edithttp://www.muturzikin.com/carteseurope/5.htm (Dialec map in Europe)
South Slavic continum and Central South Slavic diasystem
editDialect | Sub-Dialect | Bulgarian | Macedonian | Serbian | Montenegrin | Bosnian | Croatian | Slovenian |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Torlakian | x | x | x | |||||
Štokavian | Kosovo-Resava | x | ||||||
Šumadija-Vojvodina | x | |||||||
Zeta-South Sandžak | x | x | x | |||||
Eastern Herzgovinian | x | x | x | x | ||||
Eastern Bosnian | x | x | ||||||
Western Ikavian | x | x | ||||||
Slavonian | x | |||||||
Čakavian | x | |||||||
Kajkavian | x | x |
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/archive/2/28/20080408171819!Scripts_in_Europe.PNG Script and language
Čakavian and Kaykavian dialects is exclusive Croatian dialect, not serbo
edithttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chakavian_dialect Croatian diakect http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kajkavian_dialect Croatian Kaykavian dialect
Not neoštokavian dialect, neoštokavian is thre differents dialects
editNeoštokavian:
- Croatian neoštokavian ikavian and western-ijekavian (western štokavian and Dubrovnik)
- Serbian neoštokavian ekavian and estern-ijekavian (estern štokavian and Užice)
- Štokavian dialect sistem
- ^ Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian
- ^ 1) All month names are different. See below for full table.
- ^ 2) This is an excellent example of foreign influences. "Put" and "cesta" are Slavic, "drum" is Greek and "džada" is Turkish. Moreover, the central difference lies in the fact that Croatian, unlike Serbian or Bosnian, has a tradition of purism, as is the case with the Czech, Slovak, Hungarian and German languages.
- ^ vgl. Odbor za standardizaciju srpskog jezika, Odluka br. 1, Punkt 2.0.