Serbo-Croatian Translation & Interpretation Services

Serbo-Croatian language
Providing Professional Translation, Interpretation, and Localization services in Serbo-Croatian and more than 300 other languages and dialects.
Autonym(s)
српски / hrvatski / bosanski / crnogorski
Number of Speakers
Native Speakers: 21 million
Geographic Distribution
Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo
Official or Recognized Status
Official: Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo
Classification
South Slavic Language
Features
Follows a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, although with a degree of flexibility. It is also a “pro-drop” language in which certain types of pronouns can be dropped when they are made clear by the context. As a South Slavic language, it has many common features with other languages in its family, such as maintaining three genders for nouns (male, female, and neuter). Serbo-Croatian is a highly inflected language and includes seven cases for nouns and adjectives, with adjectives placed before the noun they modify. Verbs, which require conjugation, include seven tenses and three moods.
Dialects
The “standard” dialect of the Serbo-Croatian language and all four standard variants (Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin) are based on the Eastern Herzegovinian subdialect, Neo-Shtokavian. Being a pluricentric language, the differences between the four “standard” variants is more political/ethnic than linguistic and most linguists agree that “Serbo-Croatian” is a single language. The International Standards Organization (ISO) considers Serbo-Croatian as a “macrolanguage.” Besides the four “standard” versions of the language, which are mostly mutually intelligible, there are a number of other less widely spoken Serbo-Croatian dialects with varying degrees of mutual intelligibility.
Writing System
Cyrillic Alphabet & Latin Alphabet
U.S. Distribution
In the United States, the numbers of Serbian-Americans are roughly 190,000, as well as 415,000 Croatian-Americans, 200,000 Bosnian Americans, and 40,000 Montenegrin-Americans, although not all speak their respective standard varieties of Serbo-Croatian at home. Some of the largest populations of these groups in the U.S. can be found in California, New York, Illinois, Missouri, and Pennsylvania.
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