The result was delete per WP:V, which as a core policy overrules any consensus here. This article quotes zero sources. End of discussion. Sandstein 20:10, 30 July 2007 (UTC) reply
Dicdef, bordering on original research. Well, the situation is as follows: in a dialect continuum of Serbo-Croatian, there are numerous dialects, sub-dialects and sub-sub dialects. So, there probably is such thing as "Užice speech" or "Zlatibor speech", in the sense that, like every other dialect, it has some specifics. Those are enumerated in detail in sr:Zlatiborski govor with zero (0) references, meaning that they're by and large original research. I can't find any Google scholar hits on the subject, under various search terms. Most google hits for "Zlatibor dialect" by and large refer back to Wikipedia [1]; the situation is even worse for "Zlatiborski govor" [2]. The "traditional" map of South Slavic dialects classify this under wider "Eastern Herzegovinian" dialects [3]. I'm afraid that this is a case of local-patriotism without serious scholarly research underneath; there might be some social or linguistic study on the specifics of local speech around (not presented yet), but even if there were, do we want an article of specifics of every local sub-dialect around, without wider recognition? Duja ► 09:18, 23 July 2007 (UTC) reply
George, let's get straight. I wrote elsewhere that I very like the article even in the current state (which you don't consider too good). I also emplasized that it was written by a man whom I exceptionally value both as an expert on Serbian and as an erudite (...) That makes me even more uncomfortable to turn your attention to the omission of references, and I did that just because somewhere around the corner, in an ambush, a bunch of quasi-scientists waits with a bunch of half-literate articles without a single reference, to "hang" those articles on Wikipedia, with the excuse "if George can, why can't we?", ignoring the old Latin Quod licet Iovi, non licet bovi. So, this objection was not for the sake of myself, but for the sake of you and Wikipedia, and only with the desire to eliminate problems even before they emerge.