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  1. Other articles where Montenegrin is discussed: Montenegro: Languages and religion: …that their language be called Montenegrin. Montenegrin, Serbian, Bosnian, Albanian, and Croatian are all recognized by the constitution as official languages.

  2. Montenegrin (Crnogorski jezik / Црногорски језик) Montenegrin is a South Slavic language spoken mainly in Montenegro by perhaps 230,000 people. It began to be considered a separate language after the break up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, and particularly since Montenegro became independent in 2006. Montenegrin became the official ...

  3. 7 de abr. de 2018 · Montenegrin is a Slavic language, that belongs to the Indo-European family and can be written in either Latin or Cyrillic alphabets. (The Latin alphabet is more often used.) There are 32 letters, including 5 vowels. Each letter has only one sound and every letter is pronounced.

  4. Learn Montenegrin, Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian – Youtube videos from a Montenegrin woman that go step by step through basic grammar and cases. Bosnian/Serbian/Croatian Grammar – 42 Youtube videos, each explaining one grammar concept at a time. iTalki Serbian Forum – Ask questions about any aspect of the language. Montenegrin Grammar Help

  5. The Montenegrin language reconstructed by Nikčević combined two dialects occurring in the territory of Montenegro. The Montenegrin language was distinguished by, inter alia, the consonants ś, ź and ӡ. The over dialectal composition constructed in such a manner was complemented with the linguistic elements of the 19th century literary works.

  6. Montenegro has a large Serb minority with about 30% of the population identifying as Serbs. At the last census of 2011, 42% of the population considered Serbian to be their native language. 37% voted for the Montenegrin language. According to a poll by ‘Matica Crnogorska’ in 2014, the distribution was as follows. 41.1% Montenegrin.

  7. 30 de mar. de 2020 · The recognition of Montenegrin as a national language was a political hot potato for years following the country’s split from Serbia. But in 2017, the Montenegrins scored linguistic gold with the International Organization of Standardization’s identification of Montenegrin, as a separate language from Serbian. A ‘new’ Montenegro language