Serbo-Croatian,Italian and German
The national language of Croatia is Croatian, also often called Serbo-Croatian. The Croatian name for the language is "Hrvatski". French is not a commonly-spoken language in Croatia.
German. It was always Germain, even back to the 5th of 6th century.
Croatian
No, there was a Serbocrotian language (spoken in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Montenegro), Slovenian language, and Macedonian language.
Communist Manifesto, first published in London by a group of German political refugees in 1848.
It is the official language of San Marino and Italy, it is also one of the official languages of Switzerland, Croatia and Slovenia.
Italian is the official language in Italy, San Marino, and Switzerland. It's also an official language of Vatican City, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, and the European Union. And it has co-official language status in the Istria part of Croatia, and the Littoral of Slovenia.
The French language is spoken frequently in Romania.
well you have 7 countries who was in ex Yugoslavia CROATIA - language is CROATIAN BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA - language is BOSNIAN, CROATIAN and SERBIAN SLOVENIA - language is SLOVENIAN SRBIA - language is SERBIAN MONTENEGRO - language is MONTENGRIN MACEDINIA - language is MACEDONIAN KOSOVO - language is ALBANIAN and SREBIAN
Croatian is spoken primarily in Croatia, with minority communities in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and other parts of the Balkans. It is also recognized as a minority language in Austria, Italy, and Hungary.
The Serbo-Croatian language is called "Serbo-Croatian" in English. It is a term that encompasses various dialects and standard forms of the Shtokavian dialect spoken in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro.
The main language spoken in Dubrovnik, Croatia is Croatian. English and German are also widely spoken, particularly in tourist areas. Additionally, Italian is common due to historical ties with Italy.