The article deals with the northernmost variety of what is traditionally called Burgenland Croatian (with ‘Burgenland’ used in a very broad sense). Because of its marginal geographic position, the dialect is potentially of great importance to anyone interested in Burgenland Croatian. However, the information on the dialect to be found in the linguistic literature is scarce. This is partly due to the fact that after the Second World War the speakers, who originally lived in three villages in southern Moravia, were forced to leave their homes and were spread over a large number of villages, mostly in northern Moravia. After the political changes in Czechoslovakia and its successor states it became possible to trace the Moravian Croats and to ...