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  1. South Slavic. The South Slavic languages are one of three branches of the Slavic languages. There are approximately 30 million speakers, mainly in the Balkans. These are separated geographically from speakers of the other two Slavic branches ( West and East) by a belt of German, Hungarian and Romanian speakers.

  2. This page was last edited on 11 February 2017, at 00:10 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

  3. Slavic languages are coming from the Dniapro river valley, like Belarusan and Ukrainian (Ruthenian), West Slavic are developed on Germanic substratum (ie Polish) and East Slavic (ie Russian) on Finno-Turkic substratum, so their lexics are incompatible between each others, with Polish being a western version and Russian an eastern one.

  4. North Slavic languages. The term North Slavic languages is used in three main senses: for a number of proposed groupings or subdivisions of the Slavic languages. However, "North Slavic" is not widely used in this sense. Modern scholars usually divide the Slavic languages into West Slavic, East Slavic, and South Slavic. [1]

  5. A pan-Slavic language is a zonal auxiliary language for communication among the Slavic peoples . There are approximately 400 million speakers of the Slavic languages. In order to communicate with each other, speakers of different Slavic languages often resort to international lingua francas, primarily English, or Russian in East Slavic zonal cases.

  6. The first translation from the original languages (Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek) was the Kralice Bible from 1579, the definitive edition published in 1613. The Bible of Kralice was and remains in wide use. Among modern translations the Ecumenical Version of 1979 is commonly used. The newest translation in modern Czech was completed in 2009.

  7. Proto-Slavic. Old Church Slavonic, liturgical. Knaanic, Jewish language. Old Novgorod dialect. Old East Slavic, developed into modern East Slavic languages. Old Ruthenian. Polabian language. Pomeranian language, only Kashubian remains as a living dialect. South Slavic dialects used in medieval Greece.