(in English)
Geographic distribution: Throughout
Central and Eastern Europe and Russia.
Linguistic classification: Indo-European,
Balto-Slavic, Slavic.
Proto-language: Proto-Slavic.
Subdivisions: East Slavic, South
Slavic, West Slavic.
The Slavic languages (also called Slavonic
languages), a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and
a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern Europe,
much of the Balkans, parts of Central Europe, and the northern part of Asia.
Scholars traditionally divide Slavic languages on the basis of geographical and genealogical principle into three main branches, some of which feature subbranches:
1. East Slavic branch
1.1. Old East Slavic (extinct)
- Old Novgorod (extinct)
- Ruthenian (extinct)
- Belarusian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Rusyn
- Pannonian Rusyn
2. West Slavic branch
2.1. Czech & Slovak
- Czech
- Slovak
2.2. Eastern dialects
- Pannonian Rusyn
- Lechitic
- Old Polish (extinct)
- Polish
- Silesian
- Pomeranian (extinct)
- Kashubian
- Polabian (extinct)
2.3. Sorbian
- Upper Sorbian
- Lower Sorbian
2.4. Knaanic (extinct)
3. South Slavic branch
3.1. Eastern Group
- Old Church Slavonic (extinct)
- Bulgarian
- Macedonian
- Church Slavonic
3.2.Western Group
- Serbo-Croatian
- Bosnian
- Serbian
- Croatian
- Montenegrin
- Bunjevac
3.3. Slovenian
Some linguists consider Silesian a dialect of the Polish language or
Old Polish, apart from Lach dialects, which belong to the Czech language.
Some linguists
speculate that a North Slavic branch has existed as well. The Old Novgorod
dialect may have reflected some idiosyncrasies of this group. On the other
hand, the term "North Slavic" is also used sometimes to combine the
West and East Slavic languages into one group, in opposition to the South
Slavic languages, due to traits the West and East Slavic branches share with
each other that they do not with the South Slavic languages.
The most obvious differences
between the West and East Slavic branches are in the orthography of the
standard languages: West Slavic languages are written in the Latin script, and have
had more Western European influence due to their speakers being historically
Roman Catholic, whereas the East Slavic languages are written in Cyrillic and
with Eastern Orthodox or Uniate faithful have had more Greek influence. East
Slavic languages such as Russian have, however, during and after Peter the
Great's Europeanization campaign, absorbed many words of Latin, French, German,
and Italian origin, somewhat reducing this difference in influence. And
although the South Slavic group has traits which distinguish it from the West
or East Slavic branches, within itself it displays much the same variations:
Bulgarian, for example, has some East Slavic traits (Cyrillic alphabet, Russian
loanwords, and Greek influence) and Croatian many West Slavic ones (Latin
alphabet, overall Central European influence like Czech), despite both being
South Slavic.
The tripartite division of the
Slavic languages does not take into account the spoken dialects of each
language. Of these, certain so-called transitional dialects and hybrid dialects
often bridge the gaps between different languages, showing similarities that do
not stand out when comparing Slavic literary (i.e. standard) languages. For
example, Slovak (West Slavic) and Ukrainian (East Slavic) are bridged by the Rusyn
of Eastern Slovakia and western Ukraine. Similarly, Polish shares
transitional features with both western Ukrainian and Belarusian dialects. The
Croatian Kajkavian dialect is more similar to Slovene than to the standard
Croatian language.
Although the Slavic languages
diverged from a common proto-language later than any other group of the
Indo-European language family, enough differences exist between the various
Slavic dialects and languages to make communication between speakers of
different Slavic languages difficult. Within the individual Slavic languages,
dialects may vary to a lesser degree, as those of Russian, or to a much greater
degree, as those of Slovene.
Common roots and ancestry
Area of
Balto-Slavic dialectic continuum (purple) with proposed material
cultures correlating to speakers Balto-Slavic in Bronze Age (white). Red
dots= archaic Slavic hydronyms
Main articles: Proto-Slavic
language and Proto-Balto-Slavic language
All Slavic languages descend from
Proto-Slavic, their immediate parent language, ultimately deriving from Proto-Indo-European,
the ancestor language of all Indo-European languages, via a Proto-Balto-Slavic
stage. During the Proto-Balto-Slavic period a number of exclusive isoglosses in
phonology, morphology, lexis, and syntax developed, which makes Slavic and Baltic
the closest related of all the Indo-European branches. The secession of the
Balto-Slavic dialect ancestral to Proto-Slavic is estimated on archaeological
and glottochronological criteria to have occurred sometime in the period
1500–1000 BCE.
A minority of Baltists maintain
the view that the Slavic group of languages differs so radically from the
neighboring Baltic group (Lithuanian, Latvian, and the now-extinct Old Prussian),
that they could not have shared a parent language after the breakup of the Proto-Indo-European
continuum about five millennia ago. Substantial advances in Balto-Slavic accentology
that occurred in the last three decades, however, make this view very hard to
maintain nowadays, especially when one considers that there was most likely no
"Proto-Baltic" language, and that West Baltic and East Baltic differ
from each other as much as each of them does from Proto-Slavic.
Evolution
The imposition
of Church Slavonic on Orthodox Slavs was often at the expense of the
vernacular. Says W.B. Lockwood, a prominent Indo-European linguist: "It
[O.C.S] remained in use to modern times, but was more and more influenced by
the living, evolving languages, so that one distinguishes Bulgarian, Serbian,
and Russian varieties. The use of such media hampered the development of the
local languages for literary purposes and when they do appear the first
attempts are usually in an artificially mixed style." (148)
Lockwood also
notes that these languages have "enriched" themselves by drawing on
Church Slavonic for the vocabulary of abstract concepts. The situation in the
Catholic countries, where Latin was more important, was different. The Polish
Renaissance poet Jan Kochanowski and the Croatian Baroque writers of the 16th
century all wrote in their respective vernaculars (though Polish itself had
drawn amply on Latin in the same way Russian would eventually draw on Church
Slavonic).
14th-century Novgorodian children
were literate enough to send each other letters written on birch bark.
Although
Church Slavonic hampered vernacular literatures, it fostered Slavonic literary
activity and abetted linguistic independence from external influences. Only the
Croatian vernacular literary tradition nearly matches Church Slavonic in age.
It began with the Vinodol Codex and continued through the Renaissance until the
codifications of Croatian in 1830, though much of the literature between 1300
and 1500 was written in much the same mixture of the vernacular and Church
Slavonic as prevailed in Russia and elsewhere.
The most important early monument
of Croatian literacy is the Baška tablet from the late 11th century. It is a
large stone tablet found in the small church of St. Lucy on the Croatian island
of Krk, containing text written mostly in Čakavian dialect of in angular
Croatian Glagolitic script. The independence of Dubrovnik facilitated the
continuity of the tradition.
The languages of the Catholic
Slavs tottered precariously near extinction on many occasions. The earliest Polish
is attested in the 14th century; before then, the language of administration
was Latin. Czech was always in danger of giving way to German, and Upper and
Lower Sorbian, spoken only in Germany, have nearly succumbed just recently.
Under German and Italian for many centuries, the Slovene language was a regional
language spoken by peasants, and was brought to written standards only by the
followers of the Reformation in the 16th century.
10th–11th
century Codex Zographensis, canonical monument of Old Church Slavonic.
More recent foreign influences
follow the same general pattern in Slavic languages as elsewhere, and are
governed by the political relationships of the Slavs. In the 17th century,
bourgeois Russian (delovoi jazyk) absorbed German words through direct
contacts between Russians and communities of German settlers in Russia. In the
era of Peter the Great, close contacts with France invited countless loan words
and calques from French, a significant fraction of which not only survived, but
replaced older Slavonic loans. In the 19th century, Russian influenced most
literary Slavic languages by one means or another. Croatian writers borrowed
Czech words liberally, whereas Czech writers, scrambling to revive their dying
language, had in turn borrowed many words (e.g. vzduch, air) from
Russian.
Differentiation
The Proto-Slavic language existed
until around AD 500. By the 7th century, it had broken apart into large
dialectal zones.
There are no reliable hypotheses
about the nature of the subsequent breakups of West and South Slavic. East
Slavic is generally thought to converge to one Old Russian or Old East Slavonic
language, which existed until at least the 12th century. It is now believed
that South Slavs came to the Balkans in two streams.
Linguistic differentiation was
accelerated by the dispersion of the Slavic peoples over a large territory,
which in Central Europe exceeded the current extent of Slavic-speaking
majorities. Written documents of the 9th, 10th and 11th centuries already
display some local linguistic features. For example the Freising monuments show
a language which contains some phonetic and lexical elements peculiar to Slovene
dialects (e.g. rhotacism, the word krilatec). The Freising monuments are
the first Latin-script continuous text in a Slavic language.
The migration of Slavic speakers
into the Balkans in the declining centuries of the Byzantine empire expanded
the area of Slavic speech, but the pre-existing writing (notably Greek)
survived in this area. The arrival of the Hungarians in Pannonia in the 9th
century interposed non-Slavic speakers between South and West Slavs. Frankish
conquests completed the geographical separation between these two groups, also
severing the connection between Slavs in Moravia and Lower Austria (Moravians)
and those in present-day Styria, Carinthia, East Tyrol in Austria and in the
provinces of modern Slovenia, where the ancestors of the Slovenes settled
during first colonisation.
Common
features
Slavic languages have a
substantial number of palatal and palatalized consonants, often forming pairs
with related non-palatalized consonants.
All Slavic languages are fusional,
having a rich morphology largely as a result of conserving the inflectional
morphology of Proto-Indo-European.
Similarly, Slavic languages
exhibit extensive morphophonemic alternations in their derivational and
inflectional morphology including between velar and postalveolar consonants,
front and back vowels, and between a vowel and no vowel
In all Slavic languages, most
verbs come in pairs with one member having an imperfective aspect and the other
having a perfective one.
Complex consonant clusters as in
the Russian word встретить:
('to encounter').
Influence
on neighboring languages
Most languages
of the former Soviet Union and some neighboring countries (for example, Mongolian)
are significantly influenced by Russian, especially in vocabulary. In the
south, the Romanian, Albanian and Hungarian languages show the influence of the
neighboring Slavic nations, especially in vocabulary pertaining to urban life,
agriculture, crafts and trade—the major cultural innovations at times of
limited long-range cultural contact. In each one of these languages, Slavic
lexical borrowings represent at least 20% of the overall vocabulary. The
Romanian language in particular shows strong Slavic influence at all levels,
including phonetics, syntax, and grammar. This is because Slavic tribes crossed
and partially settled the territories inhabited by ancient Illyrians and Vlachs
on their way to the Balkans.
Although also
spoken in neighbouring lands, the Germanic languages show less significant
Slavic influence, partly because Slavic migrations were mostly headed south
rather than west. Slavic tribes did push westwards into Germanic territory, but
borrowing for the most part seems to have been from Germanic to Slavic rather
than the other way: for instance the now-extinct Polabian language was heavily
influenced by German, far more than any living Slavic language today. For
political reasons, there is a tendency to play down Slavic contributions to
Germanic languages. For instance, Max Vasmer has claimed that there are no
Slavic loans into Common Germanic. The only Germanic language that shows
significant Slavic influence is Yiddish. However there are isolated Slavic
loans (mostly recent) into other Germanic languages. For example the word for
"border", in modern German Grenze, Dutch grens, was
borrowed from the Common Slavic *granica. English derives quark
(a kind of cheese, not the subatomic particle) from the German Quark,
which in turn is derived from the Slavic tvarog, which means
"curd". Many German surnames, particularly in Eastern Germany and
Austria, exhibit Slavic origins. Swedish also has torg (market place)
from Old Russian tъrgъ, tolk (interpreter) from Old Slavic tlŭkŭ,
and pråm (barge) from West Slavonic pramŭ.
The Czech word robot is now found
in most languages worldwide, and the word pistol, probably also from Czech, is
found in many Indo-European languages, including Greek (πιστόλι, pistóli).
A well-known Slavic word in
almost all European languages is vodka, a borrowing from Russian водка (vodka),
lit. "little water", from common Slavic voda (water, cognate
to the English word) with the diminutive ending -ka. Owing to the mediæval fur
trade with Northern Russia, Pan-European loans from Russian include such
familiar words as sable. The English word vampire was borrowed
(perhaps via French vampire) from German Vampir, in turn derived
from Serbian vampir, continuing Proto-Slavic *ǫpyrь,
although Polish scholar K. Stachowski has argued that the origin of the word is
early Slavic *vąpěrь going back to Turkic *oobyr. Several
European languages including English have borrowed the word polje
(meaning large flat plain) directly from the former Yugoslav languages
(i.e. Slovene, Croatian and Serbian). During the heyday of the USSR in the 20th
century, many more Russian words became known worldwide: da, soviet,
sputnik, perestroika, glasnost, kolkhoz, etc. Also
in the English language borrowed from Russian is samovar (lit. self
boiling) to refer to the specific Russian tea urn.
Para- and supranational languages
Church Slavonic language, derived
from Old Church Slavonic, but with significant replacement of the original
vocabulary by forms from the Old Russian language and other regional forms. The
Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Russian Orthodox Church, Polish Orthodox Church, Macedonian
Orthodox Church, Serbian Orthodox Church, and even some Roman Catholic Churches
in Croatia continue to use Church Slavonic as a liturgical language. While not
used in modern times, the text of a Church Slavonic Roman Rite Mass survives in
Croatia and the Czech Republic, which is best known through Janáček's musical
setting of it (the Glagolitic Mass).
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