I speak Russian and I went to Varaždin this year. It was harder to communicate there than in Štokavian speaking places. I encountered a different language.
@@kajcast2438 I wonder, who came up with the silly idea to base a national language on some dialect from Herzegovina? There could not be a worse choice.
@@janTolijan No, it is not. It does not exist. Croats have never accepted their language name being used in such a name. It's use in Yugoslavia was not approved by Croats, and after Yugoslavia it simply does not exist
@@atisalvaro only old people still hate serbia, and i say that as a croatian. Sure what they did during the war was bad but, that was 3 decades ago. Serbo-croatian is a term used for when you dont want to list 4 different languages you speak. Croatian, Serbian, Montenegrin and Bosnian are bassicaly all dialects of serbo-croatian
@@janTolijan There is no such a language as Serbo-Croatian. Croatian language is not part of any other language. It is one of the EU official languages. The fact has nothing to do with hating Serbia, that renounced from such a language name as well.
@@atisalvaro Serbocroatian is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. It is a pluricentric language with four mutually intelligible standard varieties, namely Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin.
He is probably a Croatian from hercegovina. His version of the “croatian” language is actually Serbian because those phrases and words he used are what croatians from hercegovina use. They are closest to Serbian expressions
@@stefdee9162 Fun fact chedo- .Before the 7th century original language of White Croats and White Serbs was a proto Slavic language more closer to Western Slavs like Poles, Czechs and Slovaks .When White Croats and White Serbs migrated to the Balkans they mixed with the South Slavic culture and mixed south slavic language with their own West Slavic dialect .Today you have this south slavic dialect in two main parts, Croatian Stokavian and Serbian Stokavian. .Croats still to this day have areas that speak proto Slavic Croatian/Cakavian and Kajkavian is related to proto Croatian. As for Serbs their proto Slavic has completely disappeared. .Croatian Stokavian has small elements of Cakavian and little Kajkavian, basically = Croatian today has South slavic + Croatian proto Slavic + related Croatian proto Slavic. .Serbian Stokavian has no proto Serbian but it's older words are Bulgarian. Then there is a large percentage of Turkish words in Serbian, Basically = Serbian today has, South Slavic + Old Slavic Bulgarian + Modern Serbian + Turkish. Dozens of South Slavic tribes existed before the arrival of the Croats and Serbs in the Balkans, the identy of these original South Slavs is well documented. Later they joined and assimilated to become Bulgarians, Macedonians, Croats and Serbs. It was the Bulgarians and Macedonians that first formulated Stokavian into their versions. Croats and Serbs a little later around the 12century.
It sounds like a croatian who has lived in slovenia for 2 years and knows some words
I speak Russian and I went to Varaždin this year. It was harder to communicate there than in Štokavian speaking places. I encountered a different language.
Most of the Kajkavian is way closer to Slovak than Standard Croatian is.
and slovenian
and czech :D
Exactly! The "Serbo-Croatian" was invented to separate us.
@@kajcast2438 I wonder, who came up with the silly idea to base a national language on some dialect from Herzegovina? There could not be a worse choice.
and polish, some west slavic influence here ? :D
Tea je PRELEPA!
Pa ono prosječna djevojka
Prekrasna!
This is just a croatianized accent of the accent they have in ptujsko polje in slovenia
there is no single chance to hear what they said -.-
cute girl
There's no such a language as Serbo-Croatian.
Serbo-croatian is a general term for croatian, bosnian, serbian, and montenegrin. So yes actually, there is.
@@janTolijan No, it is not. It does not exist. Croats have never accepted their language name being used in such a name. It's use in Yugoslavia was not approved by Croats, and after Yugoslavia it simply does not exist
@@atisalvaro only old people still hate serbia, and i say that as a croatian. Sure what they did during the war was bad but, that was 3 decades ago. Serbo-croatian is a term used for when you dont want to list 4 different languages you speak. Croatian, Serbian, Montenegrin and Bosnian are bassicaly all dialects of serbo-croatian
@@janTolijan There is no such a language as Serbo-Croatian. Croatian language is not part of any other language. It is one of the EU official languages. The fact has nothing to do with hating Serbia, that renounced from such a language name as well.
@@atisalvaro Serbocroatian is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. It is a pluricentric language with four mutually intelligible standard varieties, namely Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin.
Zdravo????????? 🤦♀️
Incorrect!!!!!!!!!!! We say BOK for HI !!
He is probably a Croatian from hercegovina.
His version of the “croatian” language is actually Serbian because those phrases and words he used are what croatians from hercegovina use. They are closest to Serbian expressions
@@stefdee9162
Fun fact chedo-
.Before the 7th century original language of White Croats and White Serbs was a proto Slavic language more closer to Western Slavs like Poles, Czechs and Slovaks
.When White Croats and White Serbs migrated to the Balkans they mixed with the South Slavic culture and mixed south slavic language with their own West Slavic dialect
.Today you have this south slavic dialect in two main parts, Croatian Stokavian and Serbian Stokavian.
.Croats still to this day have areas that speak proto Slavic Croatian/Cakavian and Kajkavian is related to proto Croatian.
As for Serbs their proto Slavic has completely disappeared.
.Croatian Stokavian has small elements of Cakavian and little Kajkavian, basically = Croatian today has South slavic + Croatian proto Slavic + related Croatian proto Slavic.
.Serbian Stokavian has no proto Serbian but it's older words are Bulgarian. Then there is a large percentage of Turkish words in Serbian, Basically = Serbian today has, South Slavic + Old Slavic Bulgarian + Modern Serbian + Turkish.
Dozens of South Slavic tribes existed before the arrival of the Croats and Serbs in the Balkans, the identy of these original South Slavs is well documented. Later they joined and assimilated to become Bulgarians, Macedonians, Croats and Serbs.
It was the Bulgarians and Macedonians that first formulated Stokavian into their versions. Croats and Serbs a little later around the 12century.
@@stefdee9162not at all
@@stefdee9162exactly.
@@meduzsazsa8490totally yes! 😉
He is right.