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  1. All of the Slavic languages are closely related to each other, but they are also related to the Romance and Germanic languages, including English, and to others in the Indo-European family.

  2. Today, a more popular conlang is the Interslavic Language Project, that consist of some different languages, each of them shares common politics, vocabulary and grammar. To demonstrate it, we made a short comparative analysis between Interslavic and other Slavic languages.

    • Nikolay Kuznetsov
    • Preface
    • A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S
    • R U S S I A

    oddity, against the big picture, but at the same time a big picture with enough detail to give a true feel for what snaps into focus when the camera zooms in, as well as a valid panorama when it zooms out again. We have culled the examples for what we analyze as the eleven Slavic languages from many sources, published, web-based, oral and personal,...

    Among the many friends and colleagues who have contributed to the preparation of this book, we would like to extend particular thanks to Ian Press, who read the manuscript for the Press and made many invaluable suggestions; to Bernard Comrie, Grev Corbett, Roger Lass, John Lyons and Ron Sussex; to Judith Ayling, Kate Brett and Helen Barton at Cambr...

    U K R A I N E SLOVAKIA AUSTRIA HUNGARY ITALY ROMANIA BULGARIA ALBANIA GREECE BLACK SEA T U R K E Y

  3. The Slavic languages are generally divided into East Slavic, South Slavic and West Slavic. For most comparative purposes, however, South Slavic does not function as a unit. Bulgarian and Macedonian, while quite similar to each other, are radically different from the other South Slavic languages in phonology and grammar.

  4. May 17, 2024 · The Slavic languages, spoken by some 315 million people at the turn of the 21st century, are most closely related to the languages of the Baltic group (Lithuanian, Latvian, and the now-extinct Old Prussian), but they share certain linguistic innovations with the other eastern Indo-European language groups (such as Indo-Iranian and Armenian) as ...

  5. Aug 30, 2021 · Abstract: This paper departs from the definition of Slavistics and reviews the history of international Slavic studies, from its prehistory to its formal establish-ment as an independent discipline in the mid-18th century, and from the Pan-Slavic movement in the mid-19th century to the confrontation of Slavistics between the East and the West in...

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  7. The Slavic languages family is a group of a number of languages which relate to each other and it is considered a subgroup of Indo-European languages which is the family of the languages that cover most of Europe areas as well as the south and south western parts of Asia.

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