Citations:strešica


 * 1995, Stephen Fallon, Slovenia: A Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit (Lonely Planet Publications; ISBN 0864423098, 9780864423092), page 34
 * […] and ž. (That little mark on top is called a carrot in English and a strešica, or ‘little roof’, in Slovene.)
 * 2005, Nina Snoj, Slovene Dictionary & Phrasebook: Slovene–English, English–Slovene ( Hippocrene Books, ISBN 0781810477, “Introduction to the Slovene Language”, page 7
 * Slovenian uses the Roman alphabet. There are 25 letters, and three have diacritical marks (or, in Slovenian, strešica, which means “little roof”). The three letters are č, š, ž and they are pronounced “ch,” “sh,” and “je”.
 * 2006, Rick Steves and Cameron Hewitt, Rick Steves’ Best of Eastern Europe (Avalon Travel Publishing), page 491
 * In contrast to other Eastern European languages — which tend to have a wide array of confusing little doohickeys over the letters — Slovene only has one diacritical mark: the strešica, or “little roof.” This makes č sound like “ch,” š sound like “sh,” and ž sound like “zh” (as in “measure”).