supported by Croatia, <span class="searchmatch">Bosnia</span> & Herzegovina, and Serbia, defines “Serbo-Croatian” as a “macrolanguage” containing the “<span class="searchmatch">languages</span>” <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Croatian and Serbian...
supported by Croatia, <span class="searchmatch">Bosnia</span> & Herzegovina, and Serbia, defines “Serbo-Croatian” as a “macrolanguage” containing the “<span class="searchmatch">languages</span>” <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Croatian and Serbian...
European <span class="searchmatch">Language</span> Research Center (SEELRC) uses the term BCS in it's Handbook of <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Serbian, and Croatian, as explained on page 7: <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Croatian...
supported by Croatia, <span class="searchmatch">Bosnia</span> & Herzegovina, and Serbia, defines “Serbo-Croatian” as a “macrolanguage” containing the “<span class="searchmatch">languages</span>” <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Croatian and Serbian...
a pretty strong consensus among editors who actually speak the <span class="searchmatch">languages</span> that <span class="searchmatch">Bosnian</span>, Croatian and Serbian should be merged into Serbo-Croatian. I'm...