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Proto-Slavic (abbreviated PSl., PS.; also called Common Slavic or Common Slavonic) is the unattested, reconstructed proto-language of all Slavic languages. It represents Slavic speech approximately from the 2nd millennium BC through the 6th century AD.
Proto-Slavic proper or Early Common Slavic ( c. AD 300–600): The early, uniform stage of Common Slavic, a period of rapid phonological change. There are no dialectal distinctions reconstructible from this period. Middle Common Slavic ( c. 600–800): The stage with the earliest identifiable dialectal distinctions.
The Proto-Slavic homeland is the area of Slavic settlement in Central and Eastern Europe during the first millennium AD, with its precise location debated by archaeologists, ethnographers and historians. [20] . Most scholars consider Polesia the homeland of the Slavs.
Proto-Slavic accent is the accentual system of Proto-Slavic and is closely related to the accentual system of some Baltic languages ( Lithuanian and Latvian) with which it shares many common innovations that occurred in the Proto-Balto-Slavic period. Deeper, it inherits from the Proto-Indo-European accent.
- a̋
- â
- ã
- ȃ
Proto-Slavic, the supposed ancestor language of all Slavic languages, is a descendant of common Proto-Indo-European, via a Balto-Slavic stage in which it developed numerous lexical and morphophonological isoglosses with the Baltic languages.
EthnicityEstimates And Census Datac. 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 ...The following list is a comparison of basic Proto-Slavic vocabulary and the corresponding reflexes in the modern languages, for assistance in understanding the discussion in Proto-Slavic and History of the Slavic languages.
Sep 10, 2014 · Based on archaeological evidence, we know that Proto-Slavic people were already active by 1,500 BCE from Poland to Belarus. Some authors have traced the origin of the Slavs back to indigenous Iron Age tribes living in the valleys of the Oder and Vistula rivers (in present-day Poland and the Czech Republic) around the 1st century CE.