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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › South_SlavsSouth Slavs - Wikipedia

    South Slavs. South Slavs are Slavic people who speak South Slavic languages and inhabit a contiguous region of Southeast Europe comprising the eastern Alps and the Balkan Peninsula. Geographically separated from the West Slavs and East Slavs by Austria, Hungary, Romania, and the Black Sea, the South Slavs today include Bosniaks, Bulgarians ...

    • South Slavic languages

      On the level of dialectology, they are divided into Western...

    • West Slavs

      The West Slavs are Slavic peoples who speak the West Slavic...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SlavsSlavs - Wikipedia

    The Slavs or Slavic people are a group of peoples who speak Slavic languages.Slavs are geographically distributed throughout the northern parts of Eurasia; they predominantly inhabit Central Europe, Eastern Europe, and Southeastern Europe, though there is a large Slavic minority scattered across the Baltic states, Northern Asia, and Central Asia, and a substantial Slavic diaspora in the ...

    Ethnicity
    Estimates And Census Data
    c. 8.37 million Belarusians in Belarus ...
    Bosniaks (previously called "Bosnian ...
    1,898,963 Bosniaks in Bosnia and ...
    c. 10 million Bulgarians worldwide (Kolev ...
    Bunjevci (also a sub-ethnic category of ...
    11,104 Bunjevci in Serbia (2022 Serbian ...
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  4. Branches Balto-Slavic language tree. [citation needed] Linguistic maps of Slavic languagesSince the interwar period, scholars have conventionally divided Slavic languages, on the basis of geographical and genealogical principle, and with the use of the extralinguistic feature of script, into three main branches, that is, East, South, and West (from the vantage of linguistic features alone ...

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    • Slavs
  5. In Slavic languages: Languages of the family. …into three branches: (1) the South Slavic branch, with its two subgroups Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian-Slovene and Bulgarian-Macedonian, (2) the West Slavic branch, with its three subgroups Czech-Slovak, Sorbian, and Lekhitic (Polish and related tongues), and (3) the East Slavic branch ...

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