Difference between revisions of "Slavonic"

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'''Slavonic''' (sometimes called '''Slavic''') is a [[Language family]]. It is a branch of [[Indo-European]], with three main sub-divisions. The [[Slav - slave|Slavs]] were a people who prehistorically lived in central Eurasia, and expanded their territory. Their languages diverged following the expansion(s) and other events. Some Slavonic languages are written using a different writing system from that of most European languages: they use the [[Cyrillic alphabet]], or a derivative of it. Others use the more usual Roman alphabet.
 
'''Slavonic''' (sometimes called '''Slavic''') is a [[Language family]]. It is a branch of [[Indo-European]], with three main sub-divisions. The [[Slav - slave|Slavs]] were a people who prehistorically lived in central Eurasia, and expanded their territory. Their languages diverged following the expansion(s) and other events. Some Slavonic languages are written using a different writing system from that of most European languages: they use the [[Cyrillic alphabet]], or a derivative of it. Others use the more usual Roman alphabet.
*The '''East Slavonic''' group is principally spoken n the territories of the former [[USSR]]. All are always written in Cyrillic.
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*The '''East Slavonic''' group is principally spoken in the territories of the former [[USSR]]. All are always written in Cyrillic.
 
**'''Russian''' has the largest population of speakers, and is the most widely used by non-native speakers. It is the main language of Russia.  
 
**'''Russian''' has the largest population of speakers, and is the most widely used by non-native speakers. It is the main language of Russia.  
 
**'''Ukrainian''' is the native and the official language of the Ukraine, although more Russian is actually spoken there.
 
**'''Ukrainian''' is the native and the official language of the Ukraine, although more Russian is actually spoken there.

Revision as of 14:55, 23 January 2014

This page forms part of an etymology course that gives an outline of the development of English. It is written in a sequence that you may want to follow. The best place to start, if you want to follow the whole course, is Etymology course, or, if you are only interested in English, Development of English. You may also arrive at any of these articles from other links. For more information about the history of English, you should of course read a good history of the language, such as Baugh (1993), Strang (1970), or Crystal (2005)

Slavonic (sometimes called Slavic) is a Language family. It is a branch of Indo-European, with three main sub-divisions. The Slavs were a people who prehistorically lived in central Eurasia, and expanded their territory. Their languages diverged following the expansion(s) and other events. Some Slavonic languages are written using a different writing system from that of most European languages: they use the Cyrillic alphabet, or a derivative of it. Others use the more usual Roman alphabet.

  • The East Slavonic group is principally spoken in the territories of the former USSR. All are always written in Cyrillic.
    • Russian has the largest population of speakers, and is the most widely used by non-native speakers. It is the main language of Russia.
    • Ukrainian is the native and the official language of the Ukraine, although more Russian is actually spoken there.
    • Belorussian is the native language of Belorussia, although the most widely used official language is Russian.
  • The West Slavonic group contains the following, which were mostly spoken in the countries of the former Warsaw Pact.
    • Polish, the official language of Poland, is spoken by more people than any other Slavonic language except Russian and Ukrainian. It is written in a modified form of the Roman alphabet.
    • Czech (known in English as Bohemian until the mid-nineteenth century) is the official language of the Czech Republic. It is very close to (mutually intelligible with)
    • Slovak, the official language of Slovakia, formed in 1989, on the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the break-up of the former Czechoslovakia (whose official language used to be known as Czechoslovak[ian]).
    • Sorbian, Lusatian and Wendish are dialects of the Sorbian group, spoken in a small eastern area of Germany, in parts of Saxony and Brandenburg, and also in neighbouring Poland.
  • The South Slavonic group are spoken in the Balkans. There have been considerable changes in the status and acceptability of many of these, following the political changes of the past millennium, not least around the time of the end of the USSR in 1991.
    • Bulgarian
    • Serbian, the language of Serbia, Serbo‐Croat

Serbian - Cyrillic

Serbo-Croatian or Serbo-Croat, less commonly Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS) is a South Slavic language with a pluricentric standard and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. Croats and Serbs differ in religion and have historically lived under different empires, and have adopted slightly different literary forms as the official languages of their respective republics. Since independence, Bosnian has likewise been established as an official standard in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Currently, there is a movement to create a Montenegrin language, separating it from Serbian. Thus Serbo-Croatian generally goes by the ethnic names Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin. "The same language [Croatian] is referred to by different names, Serbian (srpski), Serbo-Croat (in Croatia: hrvatsko-srpski), Bosnian (bosanski), based on political and ethnical grounds. [...] the names Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian are politically determined and refer to the same language with possible slight variations." All four standards are based on the same dialect, which had served as the official language of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and later of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, from 1918 to 1991.


    • Slovenian
    • Macedonian.