On Wednesday 10 September 2008 22:24:58 geni wrote:
2008/9/10 Nikola Smolenski <smolensk(a)eunet.yu>yu>:
Fact is, learning languages is difficult. In
Serbia, English is taught
through entire primary school, but not everyone has an A, and even those
who do may not have good enough grip of language to be able to fully
understand a lengthy text in it, or even if they do, to read at the same
speed as their native language.
That is to be expected. Look at how lowland scots moved towards
english. At first only certain groups used english but over time more
switched towards english and the language itself became more english
like.
The point is, it is easier and cheaper to educate people in their language
than to force a foreign language on them.
But
Serbo-Croatian is not a the Central South Slavic diasystem.
Serbo-Croatian is a standard language, based on the Eastern Herzegovina
dialect, which is generally considered to be Serbian.
Serbo-Croatian is also what most of the world calls the Central South
Slavic diasystem.
[citation needed]