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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Serbo-Croatian_kinship
rdfs:label
Serbo-Croatian kinship
rdfs:comment
The Serbo-Croatian standard languages (Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Montenegrin) have one of the more elaborate kinship (srodstvo) systems among European languages. Terminology may differ from place to place. Most words are common to other Slavic languages, though some derive from Turkish. The standardized languages may recognize slightly different pronunciations or dialectical forms; all terms are considered standard in all language standards, unless otherwise marked: [S] (Serbian), [C] (Croatian), [B] (Bosnian) and [M] (Montenegrin) below.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Montenegrin_culture dbc:Bosniak_culture dbc:Serbo-Croatian_language dbc:Croatian_language dbc:Kinship_terminology dbc:Montenegrin_language dbc:Croatian_culture dbc:Serbian_language dbc:Serbian_genealogy dbc:Bosnian_language dbc:Bosnia_and_Herzegovina_culture dbc:Serbian_culture
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dbc:Bosniak_culture dbr:Father-in-law dbr:Sibling dbr:Montenegrin_language dbr:Stepfamily dbr:In-laws dbr:Diminutive dbr:Croatian_language dbr:Kinship_terminology dbc:Serbo-Croatian_language dbr:Affinity_(law) n12:co-father-in-law n12:co-mother-in-law dbc:Montenegrin_language dbr:Turkish_languages dbr:Bosnian_language dbr:Joint_family dbr:Slavic_languages dbc:Croatian_language dbr:Godparent dbc:Serbian_genealogy dbc:Kinship_terminology dbr:Mother-in-law dbr:Sister-in-law dbc:Croatian_culture n12:co-brother-in-law n12:co-sister-in-law dbc:Serbian_culture dbr:Serbo-Croatian_language dbc:Serbian_language dbc:Bosnian_language dbr:Serbian_language dbr:Brother-in-law dbc:Bosnia_and_Herzegovina_culture dbc:Montenegrin_culture
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dbo:abstract
The Serbo-Croatian standard languages (Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Montenegrin) have one of the more elaborate kinship (srodstvo) systems among European languages. Terminology may differ from place to place. Most words are common to other Slavic languages, though some derive from Turkish. The standardized languages may recognize slightly different pronunciations or dialectical forms; all terms are considered standard in all language standards, unless otherwise marked: [S] (Serbian), [C] (Croatian), [B] (Bosnian) and [M] (Montenegrin) below. There are four main types of kinship in the family: biological a.k.a. blood kinship, kinship by law (in-laws), spiritual kinship (such as godparents), and legal kinship through adoption and remarriage. As is common in many rural family structures, three generations of a family will live together in a home in what anthropologists call a joint family structure, where parents, their son(s), and grandchildren would cohabit in a family home.
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