Serbo-Croatian stream

Purpose of the Stream
Major: If all units in this stream are completed, it will be the equivalent of a Major

Minor: If all units up to level X in this stream are completed, it will be the equivalent of a Minor

Units in the Stream
...
 * Course code: Unit name

Participants
(imported from Wikibooks)

Serbo-Croatian

 * 1) --Ђорђе Д. Божовић 23:17, 11 November 2005 (UTC) (native speaker. Here's some advice: Knowing Serbo-Croatian language would mean that you know Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian, too, because those are not different languages, but one single language which is called in four different ways. Some small differences really exist between these languages, but Serbo-Croatian covers all the variants, and it is the most of all recommended for learning. See Serbo-Croatian Textbook and Introduction to Serbo-Croatian for further information about these languages and their "differences".)

Serbian

 * 1) --Ђорђе Д. Божовић 23:17, 11 November 2005 (UTC) (native speaker. See Serbian Language Textbook)

Croatian

 * 1) --Ђорђе Д. Божовић 23:17, 11 November 2005 (UTC) (native speaker)
 * 2) --Tomica 19:22, 25 April 2006 (UTC) Native speaker

Bosnian

 * 1) --Ђорђе Д. Божовић 23:17, 11 November 2005 (UTC) (native speaker, but I recommend to others not to start learning Bosnian, but Serbian or Croatian first, because knowing Serbian or Croatian means that you also know Bosnian very well. That's a friendly and teacher's advice. See this page for further information on the Serbian-Croatian-Bosnian languages relation)

Wikibooks
Learning this beautiful South Slavic language would open the whole spectre of opportunities for learning other Slavic languages, such as Russian, Polish, Bulgarian, Slovenian, Czech, etc. The Serbian Wikibook offers an introduction to the language, a grammar of the language, and many lessons and text for reading and practicing Serbian/Serbo-Croatian.