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  1. It is not part of the encyclopedia's categorization scheme. More information: This category is hidden on its member pages —unless the corresponding user preference (Appearance → Show hidden categories) is set.

  2. The Serbian language is one of the officially recognized minority languages in Croatia.It is primarily used by the Serbs of Croatia.The Croatian Constitution, Croatian Constitutional law on national minorities rights, Law on Education in Language and Script of National Minorities and Law on Use of Languages and Scripts of National Minorities define the public co-official usage of Serbian in ...

  3. The Romano-Serbian language ( Serbian: Ромско-српски језик, romanized : Romsko-srpski jezik; Romani: Romani-Serbikani chhib) is a mixed language (referred to as a Para-Romani variety in Romani linguistics) resulting from language contact between Serbian and Romani in Serbia and former Yugoslav countries and distinct from the ...

  4. National Assembly (Serbia) The ( Serbian Cyrillic: Народна скупштина, romanized: Narodna skupština, pronounced [nǎːrodnaː skûpʃtinaː]) is the unicameral legislature of Serbia. The assembly is made up of 250 deputies who are elected to four-year terms by secret ballot. The assembly elects a president ( speaker) who ...

  5. A Serbian Film. A Serbian Film is a horror movie which opened to much controversy. When it was released during 2010, the movie was marked with a Refused Classification rating in Australia. A highly censored version was later approved. It was released in the United States with a rating of NC-17 (No Children 17 or Under Admitted) in May 2011.

  6. The Board for Standardization of the Serbian Language ( Serbian: Одбор за стандардизацију српског језика, romanized : Odbor za standardizaciju srpskog jezika) is a linguistic institute in Serbia, Montenegro and Republika Srpska whose purpose is to preserve and foster the Serbian variety of the Serbo-Croatian ...

  7. Serbo-Croatian is the name of a South Slavic language, which is spoken in modern-day Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. After the breakup of Yugoslavia, it has been divided into four variants. The variants of this language are all based on a single dialect, Shtokavian. Speakers of these variants all understand each other.

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