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Original scientific paper

Standard Croatian Language Described Primarily by Itself

Stjepan Babić


Full text: croatian pdf 524 Kb

page 161-189

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Abstract

The author depicts the peculiarities of the standard Croatian language that no other language in the world has in respect of its historic development, the treatment of its dialects, as well as regarding its phonetic, grammatical, lexical and stylistic levels. The author also shows that in both its usage and codified norms – and norm is the only criterion that determines standard languages – there is no other language like Croatian in the world. We can therefore speak of the standard Croatian language as a specific South-Slavic, Slavic and world language.
Croatian can be said to be identical with Serbian, under the name Serbo-Croatian, only if one neglects some important facts that must by no means be neglected in a scientific analysis. The same goes for the suggestion that Croatian is a variant of Serbo-Croatian, or that Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian and Montenegrin are merely variants of the same language, in which case variant is used as a polysemic and thus scientifically insufficiently defined term. One of the arguments supporting the sameness of these languages is their comprehensibility. The author argues that comprehensibility can not be a criterion for the sameness, and as far as the comprehensibility between Serbian and Croatian is concerned the author shows that it is not absolute and that misunderstandings can sometimes cause
multimillion damages.

Keywords

Hrčak ID:

92143

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/92143

Publication date:

1.12.2009.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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