SLAVIC LANGUAGES

also called Slavonic languages, a subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. Because the Slavic group of languages seems to be closer to the Baltic group than to any other, some scholars combine the two in a Balto-Slavic subfamily of the Indo-European classification. Today, for the most part, Slavic languages are spoken in E Europe and N Asia. The total number of people for whom a Slavic language is the mother tongue is estimated at more than 300 million; the great majority of them live in Russia and Ukraine.

The Slavic subfamily has three divisions: East Slavic, West Slavic, and South Slavic. Members of the East Slavic branch are Russian, or Great Russian; Ukrainian, also called Little Russian or Ruthenian; and Belarussian, or White Russian. Together they claim close to 225 million native speakers, almost all in the former USSR. The West Slavic branch includes Polish, Czech, Slovak, Lusatian, Kashubian, and the extinct Polabian. The living West Slavic languages can claim approximately 56 million speakers, chiefly in Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia. The South Slavic tongues consist of Serbo-Croatian, Bulgarian, Slovenian, and Macedonian, together with the liturgical language known as Church Slavonic. The first four are native to more than 30 million people, largely in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Serbia and Montenegro, Macedonia, and Bulgaria.

All Slavic tongues are believed to have evolved from a single parent language, usually called Proto-Slavic, which, in turn, is thought to have split off much earlier (possibly c.2000 b.c.) from Proto-Indo-European, the original ancestor of the members of the Indo-European language family. Proto-Slavic was probably still common to all Slavs in the 1st cent. b.c., and possibly as late as the 8th or 9th cent. a.d., but by the 10th cent. a.d. the individual Slavic languages had begun to emerge.

General Characteristics

The spoken Slavic tongues resemble one another more closely than do those of the Germanic and Romance groups; yet, although Slavic languages have much in common in basic vocabulary, grammar, and phonetic characteristics, they differ with regard to such features in many instances. One feature common to most of them is the relatively large number of consonant sounds. A striking instance showing divided usage is the varied position of the primary accent in the individual Slavic languages. For example, in Czech the stress falls on the initial syllable of a word and in Polish on the next-to-last syllable, whereas in Russian and Bulgarian the accent can fall on any syllable.

Grammar

Grammatically the Slavic languages, with the exception of Bulgarian and Macedonian, have a highly developed inflection of the noun, with up to seven cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, locative, instrumental, and vocative). The Slavic verb usually takes one of three simple tenses (past, present, and future), but it is further characterized by a complex feature called aspect, which can be either imperfective (showing continuous or repeated action) or perfective (denoting a completed action). Participles and gerunds are often employed where in English clauses would be used. The article is lacking in all Slavic languages except Bulgarian and Macedonian. Members of the Slavic subfamily are more conservative and thus closer to Proto-Indo-European than languages in the Germanic and Romance groups, as is witnessed by their preservation of seven of the eight cases for the noun that Proto-Indo-European possessed and by their continuation of aspects for the verb.

Vocabulary

The vocabulary of the Slavic languages is substantially of Indo-European origin; there is an important Balto-Slavic element as well. Loan words or loan translations can be traced to the Iranian and Germanic groups and also to Greek, Latin, and Turkish. More recently, Italian and French have had some measure of influence. Slavic languages have also borrowed from each other. They tend, however, to translate and imitate foreign words rather than directly absorb them.

Writing

It is in writing, perhaps, that the most dramatic differences among the Slavic languages occur. Some Slavic languages (notably, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, and Polish) are written in differing versions of the Roman alphabet because their speakers are predominantly Roman Catholic. Other Slavic languages (such as Russian, Ukrainian, Belarussian, Macedonian, and Bulgarian) use variations of the Cyrillic alphabet as a result of the influence of the Orthodox Eastern Church. Serbo-Croatian has several dialects, the most important of which are Serbian, which is written with the Cyrillic alphabet, and Croatian, which is written with the Roman alphabet.

The invention of the Cyrillic alphabet is ascribed traditionally to Cyril, a Greek missionary sent by Constantinople to the Slavic peoples in the 9th cent. a.d., although it may have been the work of his followers. The Cyrillic alphabet was augmented with signs based on the Greek alphabet, added to denote Slavic sounds not found in Greek. So far as is known, no writing in a Slavic language existed before the 9th cent. a.d.; the oldest Slavic texts to survive are in Old Church Slavonic and belong to the 10th and 11th cent.

See also the articles on many of the languages mentioned and Indo-European.

Bibliography

See R. Jakobson, Slavic Languages (2d ed. 1955); L. J. Herman, A Dictionary of Slavic Word Families (1974); H. Birnbaum, Common Slavic (1979); A. M. Schenker and E. Stankiewicz, ed., The Slavic Literary Languages (1980); S. C. Gardiner, Old Church Slavonic (1984); R. Jakobson, Russian and Slavic Grammar: Studies, 1931–1981 (ed. by L. R. Waugh and M. Halle, 1984).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Slavic Languages  - 5072 results

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...508970-7--ISBN 0-19-508971-5 pbk. 1. Slavic languages--Syntax. 2. Slavic languages--Case. 3. Principles and parameters Linguistics 4. Slavic languages-- Grammar, Generative. I. Title. II Series...
...511712-3; ISBN 0-19-513588-1 pbk. 1. Slavic languages--Clitics. 2. Slavic languages--Grammar, Comparative. I. King, Tracy Holloway...Visiting Faculty Fellow in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Both of these universities...
...range over a number of Slavic languages and dialects and centuries...the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures of...the more accessible languages, we find nothing like...After Leger, the Slavic tales of the world...
...jargons argot , and foreign languages. Such borrowings are often...exoticism typical of romanticism. Slavic critics and literary historians...the fact that these literary languages were then being created or...philosophy, created no new Slavic terminology. The neologisms...
...and some of the West and South Slavic languages in this regard and an even...least the older stages of the Slavic languages. - With respect to the peripheral...developments in the East and West Slavic languages - discussed in Hannu Tommolas...
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journal articles on: Slavic Languages  - 333 results

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...Proto-Slavic and the North Iranian languages (Scytho-Sarmatian) so far...isolated phenomenon in the Slavic languages, this would be sufficient...personal names in all the Slavic languages which testifies to its great...
...recognition is a function of the nature of a languages writing system (e.g., Frost Katz, 1989...Perry, Coltheart, 2003). For example, languages like English and French have a set of...to as a deep orthography. In contrast, languages like Spanish or Italian always follow...
...the Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic languages - which differentiated these...Evidence in Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic languages I will now focus on an examination...elements in Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic languages because I have not yet seen...
...double coding strategy, found in Slavic languages; and the coordinate strategy, found...2.5 50% <br/ S-languages: Germanic (dagger...Slavic (dagger) 2.8 76...
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magazine articles on: Slavic Languages  - 81 results

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...admit to oral fluency in English, German, French, Polish, and his native Russian; and to reading fluency in 13 other Slavic languages, along with Chinese, Japanese, Dutch, Spanish, Italian, Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit. The number of languages he could...
Between Languages and Cultures: the Triad...example, we can analyze how Slavic immigrant children in Canada...children switch between languages confidently and appropriately...vary, depending on the languages and cultures to which the...
...obtrusive than a heartbeat. But leave one out, or put one in an unexpected place, and the effect can be substantial. Slavic languages are famous for their lack of articles. The trait carries over into how some Slavs speak English, and this has long...
...plant. As it happened, the Romance languages chose the affinity to the dawn, giving us the French aubepine, while the Slavic languages chose the flower of feminine nobility and dubbed the plant boyarishnik. Yet every new day is unlike any that has...
...language as a political accommodation. The Serbian and Croatian languages are mutually intelligible. Serbian is written in the Cyrillic...high-culture words from the east--from Russian and Old Church Slavic. Croatian is written in the Roman alphabet, is identified with...
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newspaper articles on: Slavic Languages  - 25 results

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...the Russian language. Its a treasure," she said. People speaking Russian and other Slavic languages were in abundance during the weekend festival sponsored by Slavic Home, a new Eugene nonprofit organization with ties to Eugenes Russian sister city...
Fandorin in Moscow; Slavic Sleuth Still Suave and Indomitable...bestselling novelist (published in 33 languages with over 15 million copies of his...durable protagonist who speaks several languages, knows how to kickbox, likes to take...
...languages from George Washington University. He earned a certificate in comparative Slavic languages at the University of Paris in 1952. He loved languages and comparative grammar and studied them throughout his life. In the early 1950s, he...
...occupation for three more decades. This is a remarkable study of Cold War history because the author, at home in several Slavic languages as well as the immensely difficult Hungarian, has availed herself of recently opened Soviet and other archives to...
...Someone who pronounces with gusto words in languages they know, such as French, may trip up with Scandinavian or Slavic languages, or even Spanish. Sometimes theyll rattle off a title like Ich hab mein Sach Gott heimgestellt, and then ruin the...
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encyclopedia articles on: Slavic Languages  - 24 results

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SLAVIC LANGUAGES also called Slavonic languages...classification. Today, for the most part, Slavic languages are spoken in E Europe and N Asia...the extinct Polabian. The living West Slavic languages can claim approximately 56 million...
...subfamily to which the Baltic languages appear to be closest is the Slavic. Because of this, some linguists...branches of a single Balto-Slavic division of the Indo-European...ancestor of the various Baltic languages, both living and dead, is traditionally...
...The Indo-European Family of Languages Anatolian Hieroglypic...Provencal, Spanish Slavic or Slavonic East Slavic...Serbo-Croatian , Slovenian West Slavic Czech , Kashubian, Lusatian...Subfamily Group Subgroup Languages and Principal Dialects...
...Indo-European family of languages (see Slavic languages ). Bulgarian is the native tongue...between Bulgarian and most other Slavic languages is that Bulgarian has almost...closely resembles the other Slavic languages, especially with regard to grammar...
...the South Slavic group of the Slavic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Slavic languages ). Serbo-Croatian comprises...Serbo-Croatian apart from other Slavic languages is its use of musical pitch...
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