Slavonic-Serbian
| Slavonic-Serbian | |
|---|---|
| Славено-сербскiй | |
Cover of the 1768 edition of the Slavenoserbskij Magazin | |
| Region | Vojvodina |
| Era | 18th to 19th century |
Indo-European
| |
Early form | |
| Old Cyrillic alphabet | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – |
| South Slavic languages and dialects |
|---|
Slavonic-Serbian (славяносербскій, slavjanoserbskij), Slavo-Serbian or Slaveno-Serbian (славено-сербскiй, slaveno-serbskij; Serbian: славеносрпски, slavenosrpski), was a literary language used by the Serbs in the Habsburg Empire, mostly in what is now Vojvodina, from the mid-18th century to the first decades of the 19th century, falling into obscurity by the 1870s. It was a linguistic blend of Church Slavonic of the Russian recension, vernacular Serbian (Shtokavian dialect), and Church Slavonic of the Serbian recension, with varying sources and differing attempts at standardisation.