Bunjevac language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bunjevac
Bunjevački
Spoken in: Serbia [1]
Total speakers: about 6,000-9,000 people (2002
Ranking: not official
Language family: Indo-European
 Slavic
  South Slavic
   Western South Slavic
    Ikavian Shtokavian
     Bunjevac 
Official status
Official language in: None yet
Regulated by: Unknown
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: none (B)  none (T)
ISO 639-3: none
South Slavic
languages and dialects
Western South Slavic
Slovene Language
Dialects
Slovene dialects
Central South Slavic diasystem
Croatian language
Dialects
Kajkavian · Chakavian
Western Shtokavian
Burgenland · Molise
Bosnian language
Dialects
Central Shtokavian
Serbian language
Dialects
Eastern Shotkavian · Slavoserbian
Romano-Serbian · Užice
Differences between Serbian,
Croatian, and Bosnian
Deprecated or non-ISO
recognized languages

Serbo-Croatian language
Bunjevac language
Montenegrin language
Šokac language
Eastern South Slavic
Old Church Slavonic
Church Slavonic
Bulgarian · Macedonian
Dialects
Banat Bulgarian · Shopski

Slavic dialects of Greece
Dialects of Macedonian

Transitional dialects
Eastern-Central
Torlak dialects · Našinski
Western-Central
Kajkavian
Alphabets
Modern
Gaj’s Latin alphabet1
Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
Macedonian Cyrillic
Bulgarian Cyrillic
Slovene alphabet
Historical

Bohoričica · Dajnčica · Metelčica
Arebica · Bosnian Cyrillic
Glagolitic · Early Cyrillic

1 Includes Banat Bulgarian alphabet
which is based on it.
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The Bunjevac language (bunjevački jezik) or Bunjevac speech (bunjevački govor) is a language used by some members of Bunjevci ethnic group. The Bunjevci who use it live in parts of the Vojvodina province of Serbia as well as in southern parts of Croatia. It is an Ikavian variant of the Štokavian South Slavic dialect. Its users are largely known to use the Latin alphabet, as is illustrated in their locally published newspaper.

In the 2002 census results published by the Statistical Office of Serbia, Bunjevac was not listed separatelly as a language, but those who declared that their language is Bunjevac are listed in category "other languages". For example, in the municipality of Subotica, number of those who are listed to speak "other languages" (presumably Bunjevac) is 8,914. [2]

The status of the Bunjevac language as a language or even a dialect is vague, and instead it is often considered to be a dialect of Serbian or Croatian. According to the 2002 census in Serbia, some of the members of the Bunjevac ethnic community declared that their native language is Serbian or Croatian. This doesn't mean that they don't use this specific speech; merely that they don't consider it sufficiently distinct from the aforementioned standard languages to register as speakers of a separate language. However, those Bunjevci who declared in census that Bunjevac is their native language consider it as separate language.

In the old Austro-Hungarian censuses (for example one from 1910), the Bunjevac language was declared as a native language of numerous citizens (for example in the city of Subotica 33,247 people declared Bunjevac as their native language in 1910). During the existence of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, members of the Bunjevac ethnic community mostly declared to speak Serbo-Croatian, Serbian, or Croatian.

Today, there is wish among the Bunjevac community for affirmation of their language. The "Bunjevačke novine" is a Bunjevac language monthly newspaper published in Subotica. The Radio Television of Vojvodina broadcasts TV programme ("Spektar" TV magazine) in Bunjevac. There are also demands for the school classes in Bunjevac.

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