Croatian, considered by some linguists as a standard
variety of the
pluricentric language Serbo-Croatian, is one of the six official languages of provincial administration in
Vojvodina.
Bunjevac dialect Some members of the Bunjevac community, preserved a Neo-
Shtokavian–
Younger Ikavian dialect of the
Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language, also known as Bunjevac dialect () or Bunjevac speech (). Their accent is purely
Ikavian, with /i/ for the Common Slavic vowels
yat. Croatia has categorized the Neo-Stokavian Younger Ikavian dialect to be the Bunjevac dialect with three sub-branches: Danubian (also known as Bunjevac), Littoral-Lika, and Dalmatian (also known as Bosnian–Dalmatian). Its speakers largely use the
Latin alphabet and are living in parts of
Bosnia and Herzegovina, parts of Croatia, southern parts of
Hungary as well in northernmost parts of Serbia. There have been three meritorious people who preserved the Bunjevac dialect in two separate dictionaries: Grgo Bačlija and Marko Peić with "
Ričnik bački Bunjevaca" (editions 1990, 2018), and Ante Sekulić with "
Rječnik govora bačkih Hrvata" (2005). For decades, there has been an unresolved language issue within the Bunjevac community as well as between Serbia and Croatia over the status of the Bunjevac speech. The dialect spoken by the Danubian Bunjevci living in Serbia, was standardised in 2018 and officially approved as a standard dialect by the Serbian
Ministry of Education for teaching in schools. With the standardisation of the Bunjevac dialect, activists and members of the Bunjevac National Council are striving for
language secession, with the political aim that the Bunjevac dialect will gain in Serbia the political-linguistic status of independent language. Theodora Vuković has provided, in 2009, the scientific methodology for the finalization of the standardisation process of the Bunjevac dialect corpus in Serbia, classified as the Serbian Bunjevac dialect
variety of the Danubian branch of the Neo-Shtokavian Younger Ikavian dialect. Speakers use in general the standardised dialect variety for writing and conversation in formal situations. In 2021, the Subotica city council added Bunjevac dialect to the list of languages in official use by the city administration, in addition to
Serbian,
Hungarian, and
Croatian. This has created a special situation that contradicts the official position, of both the Serbian state and
Matica srpska, that classified Bunjevac speech as a dialect. Popularly, the Bunjevac dialect is sometimes referred to as "Bunjevac language" () or Bunjevac
mother tongue (). At the political level, depending on goal and content of the political lobby, the general confusion concerning the definition of the terms language, dialect, speech, mother tongue, is cleverly exploited, resulting in an inconsistent use of the terms. The
Croatian Ministry of Culture, at the proposal of the Institute of Croatian Language and Linguistics, added in 2021 Bunjevac dialect to the List of Protected
Intangible Cultural Heritage of Croatia. ==Politics==