- South Slavic
South Slavic can refer to:
*
South Slavic languages
* South Slavic people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
South Slavic can refer to:
*
* South Slavic people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
South Slavic — South′ Slav′ic n. peo the branch of Slavic that includes Slovene, Serbo Croatian, Macedonian, and Bulgarian … From formal English to slang
South Slavic languages — South Slavic Geographic distribution: Eastern Europe Linguistic classification: Indo European … Wikipedia
South Slavic Union — The South Slavic Union was a late 19th to early 20th century idea of a federation encompassing all South Slavic states. History Following the weakening of the Ottoman Empire prior to World War I, Serbia and Bulgaria had gained independence and… … Wikipedia
South Slavic dialect continuum — The South Slavic dialect continuum covers the languages spoken from Slovenia to northern Greece. It extends west as far as the Black Sea and east as far as Albania. The standard languages in this continuum are: Slovenian, Serbian, Bosnian,… … Wikipedia
South Slavic — noun A subgrouping of the Slavic language family spoken mainly in Yugoslavia and Bulgaria … Wiktionary
Slavic mythology — is the mythological aspect of the polytheistic religion that was practised by the Slavs before Christianisation. The religion possesses many common traits with other religions descended from the Proto Indo European religion. Zbruch Idol. Contents … Wikipedia
Slavic liquid metathesis and pleophony — Slavic liquid metathesis refers to the historical phenomenon of metathesis of liquid consonants occurring in Common Slavic period in South Slavic and Czecho Slovak area. Onomastics evidence indicates that it seems to have occurred sometimes in… … Wikipedia
Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia — Total population Greece: 200,000+ Diaspora: 150,000+ Regions with significant populations Florina, Edessa, Kastoria, Thessaloniki, Serres, Drama[1] … Wikipedia
Slavic microlanguages — are literary and linguistic forms that exist alongside the better known Slavic languages of historically prominent nations. The term literary microlanguages was coined by Aleksandr Dulichenko at the end of the 1970s and subsequently became a… … Wikipedia
Slavic — [släv′ik, slav′ik] n. a principal branch of the Indo European family of languages, generally divided into East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian), South Slavic (Old Church Slavonic, Bulgarian, Serbo Croatian, Slovenian, Macedonian), and… … English World dictionary