Talk:ophoditi

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Latest comment: 14 years ago by Ivan Štambuk in topic Ophoditi
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Hello my Slavic friends. How rude is that editing, can't you see that!? How can I explain for converting word(s) from the Croatian to Serbo-Croatian (simply changing the section)?? In only one way, it is not Croatian word(s)!!! If it is so, why don't just ask user Kubura for evidence?? Now I am asking you: put evidence here that this word is not Croatian word. If you can't, return the way they were written, and just add your section. I do not do it for you. --Vhorvat 16:09, 10 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Your English is challenging to understand - perhaps you should change your en-3 to en-2. — [ R·I·C ] opiaterein23:00, 10 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
Is this provocation?? I'm glad that you looked, 2 or 3 anyway, you have well understood. If my English is so bad, sorry. So nothing constructive for now. I can be constructive. Question: Is the disputed word permitted or prohibited for the Croatian language? --Vhorvat 03:45, 12 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
By now you should know that all of our regular editors to Serbo-Croatian do not use =Croatian=, =Bosnian= or =Serbian= (or the inevitable =Montenegrin=) in rather the same way that we do not use =English=, =American English=, =Australian English=, etc. The overwhelming majority of the words would simply result in 4 duplicated entries. — [ R·I·C ] opiaterein12:45, 12 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Ophoditi

[edit]

Ophoditi is the exclusively Croatian word. — This unsigned comment was added by 95.168.115.190 (talk) at 10:04, 28 August 2010.

No it's not. If you google it [1] [2], you can find plenty of Bosniak and Serbian (in Ekavian) sites where it's being used. Much more if you also search for inflected forms. Although, most of them are not in the obscure meaning of 'patrol', but rather the basic and much more common 'behave, act'. --Ivan Štambuk 12:04, 31 August 2010 (UTC)Reply