| South Slavic languages and dialects |
| Western South Slavic |
| Central South Slavic diasystem |
| Bosnian Štokavian dialect |
| Croatian Štokavian dialect Čakavian · Kajkavian Burgenland · Molise |
| Serbian Štokavian dialect Torlakian Slavoserbian Serbian Romany · Užice dialect |
| Slovene dialects |
| Differences between standard Bosnian · Croatian · Serbian |
|
Non-ISO recognized languages
Montenegrin · Bunjevacand dialects Šokac |
| Eastern South Slavic |
| Church Slavonic (Old) |
| Bulgarian Banat · Greek Slavic Shopski · Torlakian · Meshterski · more |
| Macedonian Dialects Aegean Macedonian Spoken Macedonian Standard Macedonian |
| Transitional dialects |
| Eastern-Central Torlak dialects · Gora dialect |
| Western-Central Kajkavian |
| Alphabets |
| Modern Gaj's Latin1 · Serbian Cyrillic Macedonian Cyrillic Bulgarian Cyrillic Slavica Slovene |
| Historical Bohoričica · Dajnčica · Metelčica Arebica · Bosnian Cyrillic Glagolitic · Early Cyrillic |
| 1 Includes Banat Bulgarian alphabet. |
The Serbian Romani language (ISO 639-3/SIL code: rsb) is the mixed language of Serbian (a South Slavic language) and Romani (an Indo-Aryan language). It is spoken by the Romani people in Serbia. In October 2005 the first text on the grammar of the Romani language in Serbia was published by linguist Rajko Djuric, titled "Gramatika e Rromane čhibaki - Граматика ромског језика".
External links
| This Indo-European languages-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This Romani-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This Serbia-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




