The Croatian alphabet is a modified and extended version of the Latin alphabet which is used in Croatian language. The Croatian alphabet consists of thirty lower and uppercase letters:
Each of the five vowels may also be written with additional pitch accents, but that is uncommon.
The Serbian language uses a modified Cyrillic, the Serbian Cyrillic, which maps one to one to the Croatian alphabet. When Serbian is written in Latin script, the above letters are used.
Note that Dž, Lj, Nj are considered to be single letters — they are digraphs. This means that:
The Croatian Latin was mostly designed by Ljudevit Gaj, who modelled it after Czech and Polish, and invented Lj/lj, Nj/nj and Dž/dž. In 1830 in Buda he printed the book Kratka osnova horvatsko-slavenskog pravopisanja ("Brief basics of the Croatian-Slavonic orthography"), which was the first common Croatian orthography book. It was not the first ever Croatian orthography work, as it was preceded by works of Rajmund Đamanjić (1639), Ignjat Đurđević and Pavao Ritter Vitezović. The Croatians had previously used the Latin alphabet, but some of the specific sounds were not uniformly represented.
Gaj followed the example of Pavao Ritter Vitezović and the Czech orthography, making one letter of the Latin script for each sound in the language. His alphabet mapped completely on Serbian Cyrillic which was standardized by Vuk Karadžić a few years before. Đuro Daničić added the letter Đ/đ.
In the 1990s, there was a general confusion about the proper character encoding to use to write text in Croatian on computers.
The preferred character encoding for Croatian today is either the ISO 8859-2, or the Unicode encoding UTF-8 (with two bytes or 16 bits necessary to use the letters with diacritics).
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It uses material from the
"Croatian alphabet".
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