Czechs speak the Czech language which exists in two forms, the literary and colloquial. Slovaks speak a language, Slovak, which is similar to the literary version of the Czech language. The vocabulary in both languages is slightly different. Slovak grammar is somewhat simpler than Czech grammar.
Czechs speak the Czech language which exists in two forms, the literary and colloquial. Slovaks speak a language, Slovak, which is similar to the literary version of the Czech language. The vocabulary in both languages is slightly different.
The languages are very similar and just two centuries ago, it was possible to declare that Slovak was just a continuum of dialects of Czech. People understand each other most of the time. The percentage of words that are truly confusing or unknown to the other nation is some 5% in each language.
Czech and Slovak languages are two closely related and partially mutually intelligible
West Slavic languages; they form their own sub-branch, called the Czech-Slovak languages.Czech is a member of the
West Slavic sub-branch of the Slavic branch of the Indo-European language family. This branch includes Polish, Kashubian, Upper and Lower Sorbian and Slovak. Slovak is the most closely related language to Czech, followed by Polish and Silesian.According to Slovak-Republic.org: Czechs speak the
Czech language which exists in two forms, the literary and colloquial. Slovaks speak a language, Slovak, which is similar to the literary version of the Czech language. The vocabulary in both languages is slightly different. Slovak grammar is somewhat simpler than Czech grammar.
Czechs speak the Czech language which exists in two forms, the literary and colloquial. Slovaks speak a language, Slovak, which is similar to the literary version of the Czech language. The vocabulary in both languages is slightly different.
,The Czech Republic is located in Central Europe, with Germany bordering on the Northwest, Poland to the Northeast