Comment by rob74

Comment by rob74 8 days ago

2 replies

Yeah, but then why bring up Hungarian (which has very little in common with Serbo-Croatian, although spoken in a neighboring country) in the first place?

anamexis 8 days ago

Because Hungarian is an example of having 3 cases, but only some of the Hungarian digraphs have these 3 cases encoded in Unicode.

  • rob74 8 days ago

    Yes, buuuut Serbo-Croatian obviously has those 3 cases too, so he could have made the post much clearer by leaving out Hungarian and only focusing on Serbo-Croatian (or mentioning Hungarian only as an aside). I mean, if three of these four digraphs don't even exist in Hungarian, and "dz" is the only encoded Hungarian digraph, it's pretty obvious that the fact that it was encoded is only a coincidence?