The Macedonian language reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Macedonian language

Macedonian (Makedonski)
Spoken in: Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece, Albania
Region: The Balkans
Total speakers: 2 million
Ranking: valign="top"
Genetic
classification:
Indo-European
 Slavic
  South
   Eastern
    Macedonian
Official status
Official language of: Republic of Macedonia
Regulated by: valign="top"
Language codes
ISO 639-1 mk
ISO 639-2(B) mac
ISO 639-2(T) mkd
SIL MKJ

The Macedonian language (Македонски, Makedonski) is a language in the Eastern group of South Slavic languages. It is spoken by two million people, primarily in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the Macedonian Slavs. The Macedonian language is closely related to the Bulgarian language, and Bulgarian and Macedonian share similarities to Romanian, Greek, and Albanian. These five languages make up the Balkan language league.

Macedonian is the official language in the Republic of Macedonia, and officially recognized in the District of Korçë in Albania. Native speakers are also found in Serbia and Montenegro, Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania.

Like the other members of the Eastern South Slavic group, but unlike other Slavic languages, Macedonian has no noun cases, but has three different definite articles, which are used as suffixes.

A modified Cyrillic script, Macedonian Cyrillic, is used for writing. The earliest texts that refer to themselves as Macedonian rather than some other Slavonic language are 10th century religious codices, written in Glagolitic script. Cyrillic, with Glagolitic, was an old Slavic script. Only Cyrillic is used today because it was closer to Greek and more easily used during translation when scholars like Saint Cyril introduced Christian writings to the Slavic people.

The name of the language is considered offensive by Greece and many Greeks, who assert that the dialect of Greek spoken by Alexander the Great in ancient Macedon is the only "Macedonian language". They further argue that since Slavic immigration to the region did not begin until well after the decline of the Macedonian Empire, it is historically inaccurate to refer to a Slavic language as Macedonian. However, most non-Greek parties such as international news organizations and language scholars refer to the language as "Macedonian". See Republic of Macedonia for more on the related naming dispute.


External links