SOME 17m people in Bosnia, Serbia, Croatia and Montenegro speak variations of what used to be called Serbo-Croatian or Croato-Serbian. Officially though, the language that once united Yugoslavia has, ...
The Serbian language is being studied alongside Albanian at the University of Pristina in Kosovo for the first time since the war ended in 1999 - part of a new programme intended to help bridge ethnic ...
Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic asked Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic to address the issue of school textbooks that describe the Croatian language as a variation of Serbian. This post is ...
PRISTINA -- At least since the breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, common ground has been all too rare in the Balkans, and, where it exists, it has tended to be a source of bitter ...
The authorities in Montenegro say that more than 50 per cent of citizens will claim to speak Serbian, which could return the Serbian language to schools and official use in the country. Montenegro is ...
CROSS the boundaries of the former Yugoslavia and you face a few hassles. Heading from the mountains of Slovenia to the beaches of Croatia you encounter the Schengen border, which separates the ...