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Serbo-Croatian kinship : ウィキペディア英語版 | Serbo-Croatian kinship
The Serbo-Croatian standard languages (Croatian, Serbian and Bosnian) 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 four languages, unless otherwise marked: () (Bosnian), () (Croatian), () (Montenegrin) and () (Serbian) below. There are four main types of kinship in the family: biological blood kinship, kinship by law (in-laws), spiritual kinship (such as godparents), and legal kinship through adoption and remarriage.〔(Family, marriage and kinship )〕 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.〔(''Kinship, networks, and exchange; The Grapvine Forest: Kinship, Status, and Wealth in a Mediterranean Community (Selo, Croatia)'' by Bojka Milici, Thomas Schweizer, Douglas R. White )〕 ==Direct descendance and ancestry== Words for relations up to five generations removed—great-great-grandparents and great-great-grandchildren—are in common use. The fourth-generation terms are also used as generics for ancestors and descendants. There is no distinction between the maternal and paternal line. In addition there are terms found in Serbian for ancestors past the 5th generation, but those are not in common use.
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