Linkovi
- East Ethnia
- Yakima Gulag
- Burek Eaters
- Estavisti
- An American in Belgrade
- Sarajevo Photoblog
- Balkan Baby
- Belgrade Blog
- The Glory of Carniola
- One small lawyer's big adventure
- Finding Karadžić
- Americans for Bosnia
- Bosnia Vault
- Jugoslavija Druga
- Friends of Bosnia - Seattle
- Sam Thought (inactive)
- Mladi Behar - Boise, Idaho
- FK Srebrenica - Boise, Idaho
- Research and Documentation Center - Sarajevo
- Balkan Immigration in Washington
- Vela Luka Croatian Dance Ensemble
- Balkanarama
- Balkan Cabaret
Arkhiv
Potato i Jedinstvo
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Map: B/H/S in the USA
This is pretty cool: the MLA Language Map of the United States.
If you click through to the map, you can find counties in the U.S. where significant numbers of people speak the jezik formerly known as "Serbo-Croatian." (that's what they still call it on the maps. No, I'm not going to tell them, you tell them.)
The neat thing to me is seeing Twin Falls County, Idaho, making a very respectable showing, with a comparatively high percentage of speakers, particularly for the Western states. You can also zoom in by zip codes to see the splash of color that is the city of Twin Falls, with more speakers than all but four zip code areas in the Northwest (Richland and south King County). Idemo, Idaho!
If you click through to the map, you can find counties in the U.S. where significant numbers of people speak the jezik formerly known as "Serbo-Croatian." (that's what they still call it on the maps. No, I'm not going to tell them, you tell them.)
The neat thing to me is seeing Twin Falls County, Idaho, making a very respectable showing, with a comparatively high percentage of speakers, particularly for the Western states. You can also zoom in by zip codes to see the splash of color that is the city of Twin Falls, with more speakers than all but four zip code areas in the Northwest (Richland and south King County). Idemo, Idaho!