About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 268. Chapters: East Slavic languages, Extinct Slavic languages, Pan-Slavic languages, Proto-Slavic language, Slavic-language surnames, Slavic loanwords, Slavic toponyms, Slavic words and phrases, South Slavic languages, West Slavic languages, Serbo-Croatian, Russian language, Slovene language, Vodka, Belarusian language, Macedonian language, Ukrainian language, Sorbian languages, Bulgarian language, Old Church Slavonic, Serbian language, Polabian language, Belgrade, Slovincian, Rusyn language, Knaanic language, Romano-Serbian language, Topol, Chomsky, Swadesh list of Slavic languages, Slavic names, Croatian language, Balkan sprachbund, Shtokavian dialect, Slavic translations of the Bible, Old Belarusian language, Slovianski, Eastern Slavic naming customs, Bosnian language, Proto-Slavic borrowings, Slavic superstratum in Romanian, Old East Slavic, Slivovitz, Gorj County, Ruthenian language, Ukrainian dialects, Torlakian dialect, Church Slavonic language, Banat Bulgarian dialect, Novak, Scientific transliteration of Cyrillic, Dolj County, Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps, Krajina, Old Novgorod dialect, Slavic liquid metathesis and pleophony, Poiana, Lower Sorbian language, Izvorul, Slavic second palatalization, Gora dialect, Slavic first palatalization, D with stroke, Pannonian Rusyn language, Former toponyms in Greece, Slovio, Rusyn exonyms, Upper Sorbian language, Wessely, Novo Selo, North Slavic languages, Slatina, Sorbian alphabet, Politzer, Slavic microlanguages, Zinnowitz, Zwettl, Svante, Lhota, Patak, Moskowitz, Bunjevac dialect, Vanek, Volkov, okac language, Tshe, Takacs, Polyakov, erny, Kiez, Kovacs, Ostrov, Kova, Huta, Janowitz, Cerkiew and ko cio, -ovo/-evo, Svoboda, Brdo, Jankovi, Batushansky, Sokol, Sima, Zhukov, Petrovi, Kolovrat, Kosovo, Trebitsch, Berlinsky, Elizabeth Bible, Gavrilov, Toman, Kozak, Horvat...