Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Croatian (proper name "hrvatski jezik") is a South Slavic language that belongs to the Indo-European language family and is the official language of Croatia. It is also spoken in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina and by the Croatian diaspora worldwide. With 3.5 million native speakers, Croatian has the largest distribution in Croatia itself.

  2. Croatian in Europe · Croatian-speaking countries & Croatian language knowledge in Europe. Percentage of people who speak Croatian as a mother tongue or foreign language in each European country. Slovenia 37.13%. Austria 2.25%.

  3. People also ask

  4. The Croatian language belongs to the South Slavic group of languages. It is the official language of the Republic of Croatia, and is also spoken by Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia (Vojvodina), Montenegro (Bay of Kotor), Austria (Burgenland), Italy (Molise), Hungary, Slovakia and Romania, and by Croatian émigrés in Western Europe, North and South America, Australia and New Zealand.

  5. Croatian (/ k r oʊ ˈ eɪ ʃ ən / ⓘ; hrvatski [xř̩ʋaːtskiː]) is the standardised variety of the Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language mainly used by Croats. It is the national official language and literary standard of Croatia, one of the official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, the Serbian province of Vojvodina, the European Union and a recognized minority language ...

  6. List of countries, nations and states with an official language of Croatian. View Croatian-speaking nations. Croatian-speaking countries incl. republics with multiple official languages. Alphabetical list of countries where Croatian is spoken is sortable by column.

  7. 625. Topic (s) Identity - Language. Share. Technical Notes. Territory size shows the proportion of all people who speak Croatian as a first language that live in that territory. This map removes the countries where Croatian is dominant. This map therefore only shows 28% of all speakers of Croatian.

  8. Croatian is a Slavic language that arrived in the Balkans region with the migration of the Slavs in the 6th or 7th century. The language eventually evolved into two branches: East South Slavic and West South Slavic. Bulgarian and Macedonian derive from the East South Slavic group and Slovene, Serbian and Croatian are derived from the West South ...

  1. People also search for