Dž is like J in Joseph. Đ is actually Dj, it is relatively new letter - it used to be Dj and the sound is a combo of D and J. Your Đ sounds good. Letter Lj is combo of L and J, say it fast. :-) good job btw.
I'm Croatian and it's basically the same language, but for example our Č and Ć are more similar (both kinda hard) than in Serbian. If you know Spanish, the way they say 'muchacha', those ch-s are softer, just like Serbian soft Ć. 😁
Thanks for the comment! I'm going through every country in the world and highlighting certain aspects of them, so I finished Serbia for now but I'll be revisiting the Balkans soon.
@@HELENAA_18 kao prvo da ovaj decko ne znam uopste sta je ali srbin definitivno nije. A ovo “srbin, srbijanac” isto je obican debilizam🤷♂️ svi smo samo Srbi i to je to
OK, so first things first: it seems you mix up language and the alphabet. You say "...Cyrillic script as official language". Then ... A is like in alpha, not awesome.. Đđ is the soft one, just like j in jewel. Dž dž is the hard one as if literally try to pronounce d and French j or s in treasure...the tongue is close to your teeth. Čč is the hard one as if you try to pronounce TCH or T and SH together. Ćć is the soft one just like in church. Good job anyway!!! :)
Č is not palatalized, Ć is palatalized. Look into palatalization, maybe you'll understand. It's hard to explain on here. You'll going to need it for Slavic languages. Palatalization makes a consonant softer. In Russian almost every consonant can be non palatalized and palatalized with the "soft sign" Ь. The way you say "Ch" in English, it's always palatalized. The hard version would be more like if you combined t and š, "tš" without turning it into ch like in church. More like if you say "shaw" but with a t in front, "tshaw" - that "tsh" sound.
Dž is like J in Joseph. Đ is actually Dj, it is relatively new letter - it used to be Dj and the sound is a combo of D and J. Your Đ sounds good.
Letter Lj is combo of L and J, say it fast. :-) good job btw.
Thanks! I always appreciate comments like these, they're so helpful for me and any viewers who want to know more.
@@ASMRGeographica I forgot to mention: to practice Lj, place your tongue for L but say J.
I'm Croatian and it's basically the same language, but for example our Č and Ć are more similar (both kinda hard) than in Serbian.
If you know Spanish, the way they say 'muchacha', those ch-s are softer, just like Serbian soft Ć. 😁
Thanks so much! And thanks for subscribing!
Wow what a great video, very impressive knowledge!
You should do more serbian videos
Greetings from 🇷🇸
Thanks for the comment! I'm going through every country in the world and highlighting certain aspects of them, so I finished Serbia for now but I'll be revisiting the Balkans soon.
Dž is like (J)am and Đ is like (J)uice 😊
This is such a helpful note 💜
Thumbs up for the kitty 😍 How are you feeling now?
Thanks for another great video. Slavic languages are my favourite on the indo-european tree.
Thanks! I'm feeling a lot better (and so is the cat)
Wow u Are very good!
And ur channel actually might Help ppl in life cuz u teach Is very important things!
Greetings From Serbia!!
Btw I've just discovered your channel and subscribed, keep up👏🏻
also serbian alphabeth is only one that have one simbol for one sonud, we say write as you speak and read as it is written, its really simple
I am serbian and i know evry thing about it.
On serbia:ja sam srbian i znam jako puno o njoj
I love all the support and encouragement I've received from Serbians on my channel :)
Ti kralju nisi Srbin ili Srbijanac
@@HELENAA_18 kao prvo da ovaj decko ne znam uopste sta je ali srbin definitivno nije. A ovo “srbin, srbijanac” isto je obican debilizam🤷♂️ svi smo samo Srbi i to je to
👍🏻
OK, so first things first: it seems you mix up language and the alphabet. You say "...Cyrillic script as official language". Then ...
A is like in alpha, not awesome..
Đđ is the soft one, just like j in jewel.
Dž dž is the hard one as if literally try to pronounce d and French j or s in treasure...the tongue is close to your teeth.
Čč is the hard one as if you try to pronounce TCH or T and SH together.
Ćć is the soft one just like in church.
Good job anyway!!! :)
You said wrong ć and đ
Č is not palatalized, Ć is palatalized. Look into palatalization, maybe you'll understand. It's hard to explain on here. You'll going to need it for Slavic languages. Palatalization makes a consonant softer. In Russian almost every consonant can be non palatalized and palatalized with the "soft sign" Ь. The way you say "Ch" in English, it's always palatalized. The hard version would be more like if you combined t and š, "tš" without turning it into ch like in church. More like if you say "shaw" but with a t in front, "tshaw" - that "tsh" sound.
Thank you so much for this! I'll definitely look into this for future videos!