What languages ​​are included in the Slavic group. School Encyclopedia

Slavic languages ​​are related languages ​​of the Indo-European family. More than 400 million people speak Slavic languages.

Slavic languages ​​are distinguished by the closeness of word structure, the use of grammatical categories, sentence structure, semantics (semantic meaning), phonetics, and morphonological alternations. This proximity is explained by the unity of the origin of the Slavic languages ​​and their contacts with each other.
In terms of proximity to each other Slavic languages divided into 3 groups: East Slavic, South Slavic and West Slavic.
Each Slavic language has its own literary language (a processed part of the common language with written norms; the language of all manifestations of culture) and its own territorial dialects, which are not the same within each Slavic language.

Origin and history of the Slavic languages

The Slavic languages ​​are closest to the Baltic languages. Both are part of the Indo-European family of languages. From the Indo-European parent language, the Balto-Slavic parent language first emerged, which later split into Proto-Baltic and Proto-Slavic. But not all scientists agree with this. They explain the special closeness of these proto-languages ​​by the long contact of the ancient Balts and Slavs, and deny the existence of the Balto-Slavic language.
But it is clear that from one of the Indo-European dialects (Proto-Slavic) the Proto-Slavic language was formed, which is the ancestor of all modern Slavic languages.
The history of the Proto-Slavic language was long. For a long time, the Proto-Slavic language developed as a single dialect. Dialect variants arose later.
In the second half of the 1st millennium AD. e. the early Slavic states began to form on the territory of South-Eastern and Eastern Europe. Then the process of division of the Proto-Slavic language into independent Slavic languages ​​began.

The Slavic languages ​​have retained significant similarities with each other, but at the same time, each of them has unique features.

Eastern group of Slavic languages

Russian (250 million people)
Ukrainian (45 million people)
Belarusian (6.4 million people).
The writing of all East Slavic languages ​​is based on the Cyrillic alphabet.

Differences between East Slavic languages ​​and other Slavic languages:

reduction of vowels (akanye);
the presence of Church Slavonicisms in the vocabulary;
free dynamic stress.

Western group of Slavic languages

Polish (40 million people)
Slovak (5.2 million people)
Czech (9.5 million people)
The writing of all West Slavic languages ​​is based on the Latin alphabet.

Differences between West Slavic languages ​​and other Slavic languages:

In Polish, the presence of nasal vowels and two rows of hissing consonants; fixed stress on the penultimate syllable. In Czech, fixed stress on the first syllable; the presence of long and short vowels. Slovak has the same features as Czech.

Southern group of Slavic languages

Serbo-Croatian (21 million people)
Bulgarian (8.5 million people)
Macedonian (2 million people)
Slovenian (2.2 million people)
Writing: Bulgarian and Macedonian - Cyrillic, Serbo-Croatian - Cyrillic / Latin, Slovenian - Latin.

Differences of South Slavic languages ​​from other Slavic languages:

Serbo-Croatian has free musical stress. In the Bulgarian language - the absence of cases, the variety of verb forms and the absence of the infinitive (indefinite form of the verb), free dynamic stress. Macedonian language - the same as in Bulgarian + fixed stress (no further than the third syllable from the end of the word). The Slovenian language has many dialects, the presence of a dual number, free musical stress.

Writing of Slavic languages

The creators of Slavic writing were the brothers Cyril (Konstantin the Philosopher) and Methodius. They translated for the needs Great Moravia from Greek into Slavonic liturgical texts.

Prayer in Old Church Slavonic
Great Moravia is a Slavic state that existed in 822-907. on the Middle Danube. In its best period, it included the territories of modern Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Lesser Poland, part of Ukraine and the historical region of Silesia.
Great Moravia had a great influence on the cultural development of the entire Slavic world.

Great Moravia

The new literary language was based on the South Macedonian dialect, but in Great Moravia it adopted many local linguistic features. Later he received further development In Bulgaria. A rich original and translated literature was created in this language (Old Church Slavonic) in Moravia, Bulgaria, Russia, and Serbia. There were two Slavic alphabets: Glagolitic and Cyrillic.

The most ancient Old Slavonic texts date back to the 10th century. Starting from the XI century. more Slavic monuments have been preserved.
Modern Slavic languages ​​use alphabets based on Cyrillic and Latin. The Glagolitic alphabet is used in Catholic worship in Montenegro and in several coastal areas in Croatia. In Bosnia, for some time, the Arabic alphabet was also used in parallel with the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets (in 1463, Bosnia completely lost its independence and became part of the Ottoman Empire as an administrative unit).

Slavic literary languages

Slavic literary languages ​​did not always have strict norms. Sometimes the literary language in the Slavic countries was a foreign language (in Russia - Old Church Slavonic, in the Czech Republic and Poland - Latin).
The Russian literary language had a complex evolution. It absorbed folk elements, elements of the Old Slavonic language, and was influenced by many European languages.
Czech Republic in the 18th century dominated by the German language. During the period of national revival in the Czech Republic, the language of the 16th century was artificially revived, which at that time was already far from the national language.
The Slovak literary language developed on the basis of the vernacular. in Serbia until the 19th century. dominated by the Church Slavonic language. In the XVIII century. began the process of rapprochement of this language with the people. As a result of the reform carried out by Vuk Karadzic in the middle of the 19th century, a new literary language was created.
The Macedonian literary language was finally formed only in the middle of the 20th century.
But there are a number of small Slavic literary languages ​​(microlanguages) that function along with the national literary languages ​​in small ethnic groups. These are, for example, the Polissian microlanguage, the Podlachian in Belarus; Rusyn - in Ukraine; vichsky - in Poland; Banat-Bulgarian microlanguage - in Bulgaria, etc.

Just as a tree grows from a root, its trunk gradually grows stronger, rises to the sky and branches, the Slavic languages ​​\u200b\u200b"grew" from the Proto-Slavic language (see Proto-Slavic language), whose roots go deep to the Indo-European language (see Indo-European family of languages). This allegorical picture, as is known, served as the basis for the theory of the "family tree", which, in relation to the Slavic family of languages, can be accepted in general terms and even historically substantiated.

The Slavic language "tree" has three main branches: 1) East Slavic languages, 2) West Slavic languages, 3) South Slavic languages. These main branches-groups branch out in turn into smaller ones - so, the East Slavic branch has three main branches - Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian languages, and the Russian language branch has, in turn, two main branches - North Russian and South Russian dialects (see Adverbs of the Russian language ). If you pay attention to further branches of at least the South Russian dialect, you will see how branches-zones of Smolensk, Upper Dnieper, Upper Desninsk, Kursk-Oryol-sky, Ryazan, Bryansk-Zhizdrinsky, Tula, Yelets and Oskol dialects are distinguished in it, if you draw a picture of the allegorical "family tree" further, there are still branches with numerous leaves - dialects of individual villages and settlements One could also describe the Polish or Slovenian branches, explain which of them has more branches, which has less, but the principle of description would remain the same.

Naturally, such a “tree” did not grow immediately, that it did not immediately branch out and grow so much that the trunk and its main branches are older than smaller branches and twigs. Yes, and it did not always grow comfortably and exactly some branches withered, some were chopped off. But more on that later. In the meantime, we note that the “branched” principle of classifying Slavic languages ​​and dialects presented by us applies to natural Slavic languages ​​and dialects, to the Slavic linguistic element outside of its written form, without a normative written form. And if the various branches of the living Slavic language "tree" - languages ​​and dialects - did not appear immediately, then the existing written, bookish, normalized, largely artificial language systems - literary languages ​​- formed on their basis and in parallel with them did not immediately appear (see. Literary language).

In the modern Slavic world, there are 12 national literary languages: three East Slavic - Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian, five West Slavic - Polish, Czech, Slovak, Upper Lusatian-Serbian and Lower Lusatian-Serbian, and four South Slavic - Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian, Bulgarian and Macedonian.

In addition to these languages, polyvalent languages, that is, speakers (like all modern national literary languages) both in the function of written, artistic, business speech, and in the function of oral, everyday, colloquial and stage speech, the Slavs also have "small" literary, almost always brightly dialect-colored languages. These languages, with limited use, usually function alongside national literary languages ​​and serve either relatively small ethnic groups or even individual literary genres. Such languages ​​exist in Western Europe: in Spain, Italy, France and German-speaking countries. The Slavs know the Ruthenian language (in Yugoslavia), the Kaikavian and Chakavian languages ​​(in Yugoslavia and Austria), the Kashubian language (in Poland), the Lyash language (in Czechoslovakia), etc.

On a rather vast territory in the basin of the Elbe River, in Slavic Laba, lived in the Middle Ages Polabian Slavs who spoke the Polabian language. This language is a severed branch from the Slavic language "tree" as a result of the forced Germanization of the population that spoke it. He disappeared in the 18th century. Nevertheless, separate records of the Polabian words, texts, translations of prayers, etc., have come down to us, from which it is possible to restore not only the language, but also the life of the disappeared Polabyans. And at the International Congress of Slavists in Prague in 1968, the famous West German Slavist R. Olesh read a report in the Polabian language, thus creating not only a literary written (he read by typewriting) and oral form but also scientific linguistic terminology. This indicates that almost every Slavic dialect (dialect) can, in principle, be the basis of a literary language. However, not only Slavic, but also another family of languages, as numerous examples of the newly written languages ​​of our country show.

In the ninth century the works of the brothers Cyril and Methodius created the first Slavic literary language - Old Church Slavonic. It was based on the dialect of the Thessalonica Slavs, translations from Greek of a number of church and other books were made in it, and later some original works were written. The Old Slavonic language first existed in the West Slavic environment - in Great Moravia (hence the number of moralisms inherent in it), and then spread among the southern Slavs, where book schools - Ohrid and Preslav - played a special role in its development. From the 10th century this language begins to exist and Eastern Slavs, where it was known under the name of the Slovenian language, and scientists call it the language of Church Slavonic or Old Slavonic. The Old Slavic language was an international, inter-Slavic book language until the 18th century. and had a great influence on the history and modern appearance of many Slavic languages, especially the Russian language. Old Slavonic monuments have come down to us with two writing systems - Glagolitic and Cyrillic (see. The emergence of writing among the Slavs).

Slavic languages- a group of related languages ​​of the Indo-European family. Distributed throughout Europe and Asia. Total number speakers - more than 400 million people. They differ in a high degree of closeness to each other, which is found in the structure of the word, the use of grammatical categories, the structure of the sentence, semantics, the system of regular sound correspondences, and morphonological alternations. This proximity is explained by the unity of the origin of the Slavic languages ​​and their long and intense contacts with each other at the level of literary languages ​​and dialects.

The long independent development of the Slavic peoples in different ethnic, geographical, historical and cultural conditions, their contacts with various ethnic groups led to the emergence of material, functional and typological differences.

According to the degree of their proximity to each other, Slavic languages ​​are usually divided into 3 groups:

  • East Slavic
  • South Slavic
  • West Slavic.

The distribution of Slavic languages ​​within each group has its own characteristics. Each Slavic language includes in its composition the literary language with all its internal varieties and its own territorial dialects. Dialect fragmentation and stylistic structure within each Slavic language is not the same.

Branches of Slavic languages:

  • East Slavic branch
    • Belarusian (ISO 639-1: be; ISO 639-3: Bel)
    • Old Russian † (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: orv)
      • Old Novgorod dialect † (ISO 639-1: — ; ISO 639-3: —)
      • West Russian † (ISO 639-1: — ;ISO 639-3: —)
    • Russian (ISO 639-1: en; ISO 639-3: rus)
    • Ukrainian (ISO 639-1: UK; ISO 639-3: ukr)
      • Rusyn (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: rue)
  • West Slavic branch
    • Lechitic subgroup
      • Pomeranian (Pomeranian) languages
        • Kashubian (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: csb)
          • Slovenian† (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: -)
      • Polabian † (ISO 639-1: — ; ISO 639-3: pox)
      • Polish (ISO 639-1: pl; ISO 639-3: pol)
        • Silesian (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: szl)
    • Lusatian subgroup
      • Upper Lusatian (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: hsb)
      • Lower Sorbian(ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: dsb)
    • Czech-Slovak subgroup
      • Slovak (ISO 639-1: sk; ISO 639-3: slk)
      • Czech (ISO 639-1: cs; ISO 639-3: ces)
        • knaanite † (ISO 639-1: — ; ISO 639-3: czk)
  • South Slavic branch
    • Eastern group
      • Bulgarian (ISO 639-1: bg; ISO 639-3: bul)
      • Macedonian (ISO 639-1: mk; ISO 639-3: mkd)
      • Old Church Slavonic † (ISO 639-1: cu; ISO 639-3: chu)
      • Church Slavonic (ISO 639-1: cu; ISO 639-3: chu)
    • Western group
      • Serbo-Croatian group/Serbo-Croatian language (ISO 639-1: - ; ISO 639-3: hbs):
        • Bosnian (ISO 639-1: bs; ISO 639-3: boss)
        • Serbian (ISO 639-1: sr; ISO 639-3: srp)
          • Slavic Serbian † (ISO 639-1: — ;ISO 639-3: —)
        • Croatian (ISO 639-1: hr; ISO 639-3: hrv)
          • Kajkavian (ISO 639-3: kjv)
        • Montenegrin (ISO 639-1: — ;ISO 639-3: —)
      • Slovenian (ISO 639-1: sl; ISO 639-3: slv)

In addition to these languages, polyvalent languages, that is, speakers (like all modern national literary languages) both in the function of written, artistic, business speech, and in the function of oral, everyday, colloquial and stage speech, the Slavs also have "small" literary, almost always brightly dialect-colored languages. These languages, with limited use, usually function alongside national literary languages ​​and serve either relatively small ethnic groups or even individual literary genres. There are also such languages ​​in Western Europe: in Spain, Italy, France and in German-speaking countries. The Slavs know the Ruthenian language (in Yugoslavia), the Kaikavian and Chakavian languages ​​(in Yugoslavia and Austria), the Kashubian language (in Poland), the Lyash language (in Czechoslovakia), etc.

On a rather vast territory in the basin of the Elbe River, in Slavic Laba, lived in the Middle Ages Polabian Slavs who spoke the Polabian language. This language is a severed branch from the Slavic language "tree" as a result of the forced Germanization of the population that spoke it. He disappeared in the 18th century. Nevertheless, separate records of Polabian words, texts, translations of prayers, etc., have come down to us, from which it is possible to restore not only the language, but also the life of the disappeared Polabyans. And at the International Congress of Slavists in Prague in 1968, the famous West German Slavist R. Olesh read a report in the Polabian language, thus creating not only literary written (he read from typescript) and oral forms, but also scientific linguistic terminology. This indicates that almost every Slavic dialect (dialect) can, in principle, be the basis of a literary language. However, not only Slavic, but also another family of languages, as numerous examples of the newly written languages ​​of our country show.

Classification methods for Slavic languages

The first printed information about the Slavic languages ​​was usually presented as a list, i.e. enumeration. So did the Czech J. Blagoslav in his grammatical work on the Czech language of 1571 (published only in 1857), in which he notes Czech, then “Slovene” (probably Slovak), where he also attributed the language of the Croats, then follows Polish language; he also mentions the southern (possibly Church Slavonic), "Mazovian" (actually a Polish dialect), "Moscow" (i.e. Russian). Yu. Krizhanich, comparing in the XVII century. some Slavic languages, spoke of the proximity of some of them to each other, but did not dare to classify them. "List classifications" of Slavic languages, i.e. an attempt to single them out by enumeration and thereby distinguish them from other Indo-European languages ​​is also characteristic of the 18th century, although occasionally they are also found in the 19th century. So, in 1787-1789. By decree of Empress Catherine, a two-volume book “Comparative Dictionaries of All Languages ​​and Dialects” was published in St. Petersburg - an attempt to collect information about all the languages ​​\u200b\u200bof the world known by that time and give them parallel lists of words. It is important for us that among “all languages ​​and dialects” there were also 13 Slavic languages ​​(“dialects”) submitted here: the words there are given “1 - in Slavonic, 2 - Slavic-Hungarian, 3 - Illyrian, 4 - Bohemian, 5 - Serbian, 6 - Vendsky, 7 - Sorabsky, 8 - Polabsky, 9 - Kashubsky, 10 - Polish, 11 - Little Russian, 12 - Suzdal" + 13 "in Russian"; “Slavic-Hungarian” is Slovak, “Vendsky” is one of the Lusatian Serb languages, “Suzdal” is social jargon! F. Mikloshich in "Morphology of the Slavic Languages" (1852) gives languages ​​in the following order: a) Old Slavonic, b) New Slavonic (Slovene), c) Bulgarian, d) Serbian (and Croatian), e) Little Russian, or Ukrainian (and Belarusian ), f) Great Russian, g) Czech (and Slovak), h) Polish, i) Upper Lusatian, j) Lower Lusatian; but without Polabian and Kashubian.

Classification by J. Dobrovsky.

Attempts to classify the Slavic languages ​​on a scientific basis date back to the beginning of the 19th century. and are associated with the name of the founder of Slavic philology J. Dobrovsky. For the first time, a list of Slavic languages ​​and dialects was given by Dobrovsky in 1791-1792. in the book "History Czech language and Literature", published on German. There was no classification yet. He singled out the “full” Slavic language and listed its dialects, including Russian, “Polish with Silesian”, “Illyrian” with Bulgarian, “Rats-Serbian”, Bosnian, “Slavonian” (dialects of the historical region of Slavonia in Croatia), "Dalmatian and Dubrovnik", Croatian with Kajkavian, with "Wind" (Slovenian), "Czech with Moravian, Silesian and Slovak", Lusatian. In the second edition of this book (1818) and especially in his main work on the Old Church Slavonic language according to its dialects (“Institutiones linguae slavicae dialecti veteris”, 1822), Dobrovsky for the first time presents a scientific classification of Slavic languages, dividing them into two groups (each with 5 languages ):

  • A (Eastern): Russian, Church Slavonic (Slavica vetus), "Illyrian", or Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian, or "Vindian" ("in Krajina, Styria and Carinthia");
  • B (Western): Slovak, Czech, “Vendian Upper Sorbian” (= Upper Sorbian) and “Vendian Lower Sorbian” (= Lower Sorbian), Polish.

J. Dobrovsky relied on 10 signs of phonetic, word-forming and lexical properties, cf .:

In the future, signs 3 (l-epenteticum), 4 (combinations , ) and 6 (combinations , ) will be regularly, up to the present day, used by researchers when comparing three subgroups of Slavic languages. Other signs will remain unclaimed, for example, the prefix rose-, which is also characteristic of the East Slavic languages, in particular, for Ukrainian (rozum ‘mind’). In addition, the classification lacks several languages ​​- Ukrainian, Kashubian, Bulgarian.

Views on classification after J. Dobrovsky.

Soon after Dobrovsky, the largest Slavist of the 19th century took up the classification of Slavic languages. P. Y. SHAFARIK. In the book "History of Slavic languages ​​and literatures" (1826) and especially in the famous "Slavic antiquities" (1837) and "Slavic ethnography" (1842), he, following Dobrovsky, presented a two-component classification of "Slavic dialects":

  • 1) southeastern group: Russian, Bulgarian, "Illyrian" (Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian);
  • 2) northwestern group: "Lechitic" (Polish, Kashubian), Czech (Czech, Moravian, Slovak), Polabian (+ Upper and Lower Lusatian).

Of the 10 signs of Dobrovsky, Shafarik used only two phonetic ones - No. 3 and No. 4, he considered the rest to be insignificant. On the other hand, he added such a sign: dropout [ d] and [t] before [ n] in the southeast and preservation - in western typeϖ ν?τι - vadnouti ‘wither’. It is significant that A. Schleicher, the creator of the “family tree” hypothesis, applied it to the Slavic languages ​​as well. Thus, outlining the development of the northeastern branch of the Indo-European languages ​​(1865), he proposed the following scheme for the differentiation of the Slavic languages:

Here the western group is opposed to the combined southern and eastern. Missing Slovak, Kashubian, Belarusian languages, but Ukrainian was reflected along with Great Russian. Two-component classifications suffered from large generalizations, the omission of certain languages, and, in addition, were based on a minimum number of linguistic distinguishing features. Here is a summary table of the most important two-component classifications of the Slavic languages ​​of the 19th century to see how far the three-component classification that replaced them has gone:

Reading the above table horizontally and vertically, it is not difficult to establish which languages ​​and how are reflected in a particular classification; a dash (sign -) may indicate that the author did not know about the existence of a particular language or considered it to be an adverb (dialect) of a larger language, etc.

The three-component classification model and its shortcomings.

The two-component classification is being replaced by a three-component one. Doubts about the two-component classification proposed by J. Dobrovsky were expressed by A. Kh. Vostokov, pointing out that the Russian language, in a number of its characteristics, occupies an independent position between the southern and western languages. It can be said that the idea of ​​a three-component division of the Slavic languages ​​goes back to Vostokov, which was later supported by M. A. Maksimovich (works of 1836, 1838, 1845), N. Nadezhdin (1836), the Czech F. Palatsky (1836) and others. Maksimovich developed Vostokov's idea, highlighting the western, southern (or transdanubian) and eastern branch. Palacki, emphasizing the geographical principle, divided the Slavic languages ​​into southwestern (= South Slavic), northwestern (= West Slavic) and East Slavic. This classificatory model was reinforced throughout much of the 19th century. In its approval, a special role was played by I. I. Sreznevsky (1843).

Based on the historical and ethnographic (common historical destinies individual groups of Slavic peoples, common material and spiritual culture, etc.) and linguistic criteria, he proposed to distribute the Slavic "dialects" as follows:

  • 1) Eastern dialects: Great Russian, Ukrainian;
  • 2) southwestern dialects (= South Slavic): Old Church Slavonic, Bulgarian, Serbian and Croatian, "Horutanian" (= Slovenian);
  • 3) northwestern dialects (= West Slavic): Polish, Polabian, Lusatian, Czech and Slovak.

Classification by I. I. Sreznevsky used up to the present. True, some changes have been made to it, for example, in terms: instead of "adverbs" - languages; in the names of subgroups - respectively East Slavic, South Slavic and West Slavic; Belarusian is included in East Slavic, and Kashubian is included in West Slavic.

However, this classification has also been criticized. The fact is that the material of each Slavic language or dialect is quite diverse and does not always fit into the framework of classifications, which, as a rule, are based on taking into account only a few - usually phonetic - signs, according to which languages ​​are included in one or another subgroup. Outside the classification principles are numerous linguistic features that bring together languages ​​traditionally assigned to different subgroups. Such signs are often simply not taken into account.

Isogloss method and its role in the classification of dialects and languages.

Only in the twentieth century the procedure for identifying language parallels using the isogloss method began to take shape. This method is formulated as the establishment on a linguistic (dialectological) map of the lines of distribution of one or another linguistic phenomenon in order to determine the degree of proximity between dialects and dialects within individual languages ​​and between languages ​​- within individual linguistic subgroups or groups. The isogloss method, applied to linguistic material of all levels (i.e., phonetic, grammatical, lexical), allows you to more clearly determine the place and relationship of related languages ​​to each other, which may lead to a revision of some provisions of the traditional classification. O.N. Trubachev (1974) rightly wrote about this at one time, pointing out the insufficiency of the three-component classification, which poorly takes into account the original dialect fragmentation of the Proto-Slavic language:

  • “1) West Slavic, East Slavic and South Slavic language groups were secondarily consolidated from components of very different linguistic origins,
  • 2) the original Slavia was not a linguistic monolith, but its opposite, i.e.<…> a complex set isogloss"

According to some experts, within the East Slavic subgroup, Russian and Ukrainian are more distant from each other, while Belarusian occupies, as it were, an intermediate position between them (there is also, however, an opinion about the great proximity of the Belarusian and Russian languages). Be that as it may, but some features bring Belarusian closer to the Russian language (for example, Akanye), others - to Ukrainian (for example, the presence of a long-past tense in both languages). It has long been noted that the Ukrainian language has a number of features that unite it with the South Slavic languages ​​(especially with their western part), for example, inflection of verbs 1 l. pl. h. present tense -mo: write-mo ‘we write’, practice-mo ‘we work’, etc. - cf. South Slavic Serbian-Croatian write-mo, for the sake of-mo, Slovenian. piše-mo, dela-mo, etc.

Methods based on phonetic and word-formation material

Attempts, on the basis of some signs, to establish in which direction the development of the speech array took place after the collapse of the Proto-Slavic language, do not stop to this day. The latest hypothesis on this issue belongs to the Belarusian Slavist F.D. Klimchuk (2007). He analyzes the phonetic development in the modern Slavic languages ​​and dialects of a number of elements in the ancient words specially selected for these purposes - ten, black grouse, wild, quiet and smoke. Here is how these words look in phonetic transmission:

In accordance with this, the Slavic dialect continuum is divided into two zones - northern and southern. To prove this, it is necessary to formulate the conditions and trace the form in which the selected phonetic elements were realized in specific Slavic languages ​​and dialects. It's about O

  • a) realization of consonants [d], [t], [z], [s], [n] before etymological [e], [i];
  • b) about the distinction between vowels [i] and y [ы] or their merging into one sound.

In the northern zone, the consonants [d], [t], [z], [s], [n] in the indicated position are soft, in the southern zone they are hard (i.e. velarized or non-velarized, often called semi-soft). The vowels [i] and y [ы] in the northern zone retained their quality, in the southern zone they merged into one sound. In the Proto-Slavic, Old Slavonic and Book Old Russian languages ​​of the early period, the vowels [i] and y [ы] differed from each other, representing two independent sounds. The consonants [d], [t], [z], [s], [n] before the etymological [e], [i] in these languages ​​were pronounced “semi-softly”. In other words, they were solid but not velarized. The Proto-Slavic model for the implementation of consonants [d], [t], [z], [s], [n] before [e], [i] was preserved only in some regions and microregions of Slavia - in many dialects of the Carpathians and the upper reaches of the river. San, sometimes in Polissya, as well as in the northern and southern parts Russia. In a significant part of the dialects of the Slavic languages ​​of the northern zone, the soft consonants [d], [t] have changed into , respectively. This phenomenon has received the name tsekanya-zekanya.

Studying the distribution of more than 70 suffixes of nouns across the Slavic territory, as well as conducting a group analysis of geographical and ichthyological (the name of fish and everything connected with them) vocabulary, A. S. Gerd and V. M. Mokienko (1974) singled out on this basis four Slavic areas opposed to each other:

  • 1) West East Slavic - South Slavic;
  • 2) West East Slavic + Slovenian - South Slavic (except Slovenian);
  • 3) East Slavic - West South Slavic;
  • 4) North Slavic and West South Slavic - East South Slavic (Bulgarian and Macedonian).

A quantitative method based on phonetic morphological features.

In the twentieth century another approach to the study of the ways of the collapse of the Proto-Slavic language and the establishment of the degree of closeness of the Slavic languages ​​in relation to each other is taking shape. This approach is called quantitative or statistical. The Pole J. Chekanovsky was the first to use it in relation to the Slavic material in 1929. Based on the list provided to him by T. Ler-Splavinsky of several dozen phonetic and morphological features characteristic of various regions of Slavia, Chekanovskiy compiles a special table indicating the presence ~ absence of such features in a particular language, after which, using special statistical techniques, it establishes an index of proximity between languages.

The Lusatian Serbo languages ​​occupy a central place in the area of ​​the West Slavic languages. The Polabian language is closer to Czech and Slovak than to Polish. Chekanovsky also comes to the conclusion that there were deep ties between the Lechitic languages ​​and the Northern Great Russian dialects. Moreover, the author believes that the future East Slavic massif, under the influence of the Avar raids, broke away from the northern massif, which united both Western and Eastern Slavs.

Before the arrival of the Hungarians in the Pannonian lowland (the end of the 9th century), the western and southern Slavs formed a wide belt stretching from north to south (to the Balkans). The expansion of the Hungarians separated the western and southern Slavs. Traces of former connections in the form of common features are noted in the language of Czechs and Slovaks, on the one hand, and in Slovenian dialects, on the other. And in the South Slavic massif itself, there was a division into a western branch (Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian) and an eastern branch (Old Slavic, Bulgarian, and later Macedonian). Chekanovsky believed that his conclusions should shake the existing opinion about the straightforwardness of the division of the Proto-Slavic into three arrays.

Method of lexical-statistical modeling.

A qualitatively new turn marks the appearance in 1994 of A. F. Zhuravlev's monograph "Lexico-statistical modeling of the system of Slavic linguistic kinship" (based on a doctoral dissertation defended in 1992). The author for the first time refers to the Proto-Slavic lexical material, which by hundreds of times exceeds the phonetic-morphological features traditionally used to determine linguistic kinship. There is a significant difference between these two categories of features: if phonetic-morphological features evolve mainly by replacing some elements with others, then the development of the dictionary proceeds mainly through the accumulation (cumulation) of more and more new words. In addition, the author rightly considers the vocabulary to be more stable over time than phonetics and morphology, and this refers to the vocabulary of its most ancient layer. Zhuravlev makes a continuous selection from the first 15 issues of the "Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages" edited by O. N. Trubachev (before the word * lokas 'puddle, pothole on the road') - a total of 7557 positions (headwords), while he avoids post-Proto-Slavic, bookish and some other categories of words that were absent in the Proto-Slavic time. Interesting statistics of the Proto-Slavic vocabulary, preserved in the analyzed Slavic languages ​​and dialects, turned out to be:

It should be noted that the presented data was to a certain extent influenced by such a factor as the completeness or incompleteness of the collected vocabulary for a particular language (as, for example, for Polab - an extinct language and known only from records and written monuments).

Taking into account the derived indices of genetic proximity, the Russian language, for example, is characterized by the following relationships:

  • a) within the East Slavic subgroup: North and South Great Russian dialects are lexically closer to Belarusian than to Ukrainian;
  • b) outside the East Slavic subgroup, the statistical similarity of the Proto-Slavic lexical heritage of the North Great Russian dialect is closer to the Serbo-Croatian language,
  • c) while the South Great Russian dialect is turned to Polish,
  • d) the Russian language as a whole at the level of Proto-Slavic vocabulary is closer to Polish
  • e) and to Serbo-Croatian.

The difference between the results obtained by phonostatistical and lexico-statistical methods is found, for example, in the qualification of languages ​​with the highest degree proximity: in the first case, at the language level, these are Czech and Slovak, and in the second, Serboluzhitsky. Zhuravlev is inclined to believe that such a discrepancy is caused primarily by the difference in the supporting material - phonetics and vocabulary, and by the inconsistency and unequal pace of their historical development. At the same time, both approaches allow us to conclude that the West Slavic group as a whole demonstrates its inhomogeneous, i.e. heterogeneous character. In this regard, the idea is expressed that the practice of the initial division of the Proto-Slavic into western and eastern massifs and further into eastern and southern or western and southern should give way to other, more complex and multidimensional relationships.

Traditional classification, taking into account some of the latest data

As you can see, the totality of some features divides the Slavic language array in one direction, the totality of others - in another. Moreover, even within the planned zones themselves, linguistic and dialectal isoglosses can be distributed in different directions, depriving the subgroups (western, southern and eastern) of the known genetic classification of more or less clear boundaries, on the contrary, outlining them either as intersecting with each other, or as entering into each other, then in the form of isolated situations that turned out to be torn off from the main array, etc. All this suggests that both the Proto-Slavic speech array and the arrays formed after its collapse were characterized by a constant quality - the original dialect fragmentation, the lack of clear boundaries between local speech arrays, their mobility, etc.

Taking into account the achievements of the isogloss method, quantitative analysis of the proximity of languages ​​and dialects, as well as taking into account situations of linguistic continuity, etc., the traditional three-component classification of Slavic languages ​​can currently be schematically represented as follows:

East Slavic:

South Slavic:

West Slavic:

Thus, the problem of classifying Slavic languages ​​has not been finally resolved. It is believed that its solution will depend on the compilation of the All-Slavic Linguistic Atlas (OLA), the question of which was raised at the I International Congress of Slavists in Prague in 1929. Since 1961, the Commission on the OLA, which includes specialists on linguistic geography and dialectology of all Slavic and a number of non-Slavic countries. The material is collected in 850 Slavonic (usually rural) settlements, including some resettlement territories. For this purpose, a questionnaire was compiled, including 3,454 questions - on phonetics, grammar, vocabulary and word formation. The distribution of signs is studied and mapped (the principle applies: one sign - one map), while paying attention to isoglosses and their bundles, i.e. clusters.

Since 1965, the Institute of the Russian Language. V. V. Vinogradov Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow regularly publishes collections of studies and materials under common name“Common Slavic Linguistic Atlas. Materials and Research”, and in 1988 the first issue of the atlas appeared, dedicated to the reflexes of the yat (* e) in the modern Slavic territory. Words with reflexes of the specified vowel are given in transcription. For the first time, it is possible to see, for example, a word and its transcription in all its phonetic subtleties in the vast territory inhabited by modern Slavs.

As an example, let's take the Proto-Slavic word *celovekъ 'man' and see in what pronunciation forms it really appears in different Slavic areas (the stroke "indicates that the syllable following it is stressed): clovjek - clouk - clajk - c'lo" vek - c'lo "vik - šlo" vik - co "vek - c'ojek - cojak - cvek - coek - clov'ek - cala" v'ek - colo "v'ik - c'ila" v'ek - cuek - c'elo "v'ek - c'olo" v'ek - š'ila "v'ek - cu?ov'ek etc. etc.

What does such a linguo-geographic distribution show? given word? And the fact that in reality the word in the process of historical development undergoes serious phonetic changes. What remains of the phonetic elements that made up the Proto-Slavic word *celovekъ? Only one element turned out to be stable - the final one - k, while the first element appears either in a hard or in a soft form, or in general turns into a whistling ([s], ) or hissing ([ š], [ š']) ; [e] is preserved somewhere, but somewhere it turns into [i], [o], [a] or disappears altogether. The fate of subsequent vowels and consonants is also tortuous. This method shows us how one and the same word really lives in different Slavic areas. From this we can conclude how complex phonetic and other processes are and how difficult it is for scientists to follow them and classify their results for certain purposes. Nevertheless, the three-term genetic classification of the Slavic languages, which has already become a classic, is still actively used by researchers.

Education

Slavic. What languages ​​belong to the Slavic group?

March 14, 2015

The Slavic group of languages ​​is a large branch of the Indo-European languages, since the Slavs are the largest group of people in Europe united by similar speech and culture. They are used by more than 400 million people.

General information

The Slavic group of languages ​​is a branch of the Indo-European languages ​​used in most countries of Eastern Europe, the Balkans, parts of Central Europe and northern Asia. It is most closely related to the Baltic languages ​​(Lithuanian, Latvian and the extinct Old Prussian). The languages ​​belonging to the Slavic group originated from Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Ukraine) and spread to the rest of the above territories.

Classification

There are three groups of Slavic languages: South Slavic, West Slavic and East Slavic branches.

V colloquial speech, in contrast to the clearly divergent literary, linguistic boundaries are not always obvious. There are transitional dialects connecting different languages, except in the area where South Slavs are separated from other Slavs by Romanians, Hungarians and German-speaking Austrians. But even in these isolated areas there are some remnants of the old dialectal continuity (for example, the similarity of Russian and Bulgarian).

Therefore, it should be noted that the traditional classification in terms of three separate branches should not be considered as a true model of historical development. It is more correct to imagine it as a process in which differentiation and reintegration of dialects constantly took place, as a result of which the Slavic group of languages ​​\u200b\u200bhas a striking homogeneity throughout the entire territory of its distribution. Centuries of way different peoples intersected and their cultures intermingled.

Differences

Still, it would be an exaggeration to assume that communication between any two speakers of different Slavic languages ​​is possible without any linguistic difficulties. Many differences in phonetics, grammar and vocabulary can cause misunderstandings even in a simple conversation, not to mention the difficulties in journalistic, technical and artistic speech. So, Russian word"green" is recognizable to all Slavs, but "red" means "beautiful" in other languages. Suknja is “skirt” in Serbo-Croatian, “coat” in Slovene, the similar expression is “cloth” - “dress” in Ukrainian.

Eastern group of Slavic languages

It includes Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian. Russian is the native language of almost 160 million people, including many residents of countries that were part of the former Soviet Union. Its main dialects are northern, southern and transitional central group. Including the Moscow dialect, on which the literary language is based, belongs to it. In total, about 260 million people speak Russian in the world.

In addition to the "great and mighty", the Eastern Slavic group of languages ​​includes two more major languages.

  • Ukrainian, which is divided into northern, southwestern, southeastern and Carpathian dialects. The literary form is based on the Kiev-Poltava dialect. More than 37 million people speak Ukrainian in Ukraine and neighboring countries, and more than 350,000 people know the language in Canada and the United States. This is due to the presence of a large ethnic community of migrants who left the country in late XIX century. The Carpathian dialect, which is also called Carpatho-Russian, is sometimes treated as a separate language.
  • Belarusian - it is spoken by about seven million people in Belarus. Its main dialects are southwestern, some features of which can be explained by proximity to the Polish lands, and northern. The Minsk dialect, which serves as the basis for the literary language, is located on the border of these two groups.

West Slavic branch

It includes the Polish language and other Lechitic (Kashubian and its extinct variant - Slovenian), Lusatian and Czechoslovak dialects. This Slavic group of the language family is also quite common. More than 40 million people speak Polish not only in Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe (in particular, in Lithuania, the Czech Republic and Belarus), but also in France, the USA and Canada. It is also divided into several subgroups.

Polish dialects

The main ones are the northwestern, southeastern, Silesian and Mazovian. The Kashubian dialect is considered part of the Pomeranian languages, which, like Polish, are Lechitic. Its speakers live west of Gdansk and on the coast of the Baltic Sea.

The extinct Slovene dialect belonged to the northern group of Kashubian dialects, which differs from the southern one. Another unused Lechitic language is Polab, which was spoken in the 17th and 18th centuries. Slavs living in the region of the Elbe River.

Its close relative is Serbolusatian, which is still spoken by the people of Lusatia in East Germany. It has two literary languages: Upper Sorbian (used in and around Bautzen) and Lower Sorbian (common in Cottbus).

Czechoslovak language group

It includes:

  • Czech, spoken by about 12 million people in the Czech Republic. His dialects are Bohemian, Moravian and Silesian. The literary language was formed in the 16th century in Central Bohemia on the basis of the Prague dialect.
  • Slovak, it is used by about 6 million people, most of them are residents of Slovakia. Literary speech was formed on the basis of the dialect of Central Slovakia in the middle of the 19th century. Western Slovak dialects are similar to Moravian and differ from the central and eastern ones, which share common features with Polish and Ukrainian.

South Slavic group of languages

Among the three main ones, it is the smallest in terms of the number of native speakers. But this is an interesting group of Slavic languages, the list of which, as well as their dialects, is very extensive.

They are classified as follows:

1. Eastern subgroup. It includes:


2. Western subgroup:

  • Serbo-Croatian - about 20 million people use it. The basis for the literary version was the Shtokavian dialect, which is common in most of the Bosnian, Serbian, Croatian and Montenegrin territory.
  • Slovenian is spoken by more than 2.2 million people in Slovenia and the surrounding areas of Italy and Austria. It shares some common features with Croatian dialects and includes many dialects with great differences between them. In Slovene (in particular its western and northwestern dialects), traces of old connections with the West Slavic languages ​​(Czech and Slovak) can be found.

SLAVIC LANGUAGES, a group of languages ​​belonging to the Indo-European family, spoken by more than 440 million people in Eastern Europe and North and Central Asia. The thirteen currently existing Slavic languages ​​are divided into three groups: 1) the East Slavic group includes Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian; 2) West Slavic includes Polish, Czech, Slovak, Kashubian (which is spoken in a small area in northern Poland) and two Lusatian (or Serb Lusatian) languages ​​​​- Upper Lusatian and Lower Lusatian, common in small areas in eastern Germany; 3) the South Slavic group includes: Serbo-Croatian (spoken in Yugoslavia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina), Slovene, Macedonian and Bulgarian. In addition, there are three dead language- Slovenian, which disappeared at the beginning of the 20th century, Polabian, extinct in the 18th century, and also Old Slavonic - the language of the first Slavic translations of the Holy Scripture, which is based on one of the ancient South Slavic dialects and which was used in worship in Slavic Orthodox Church but never been everyday spoken language (cm. OLD SLAVONIC LANGUAGE).

Modern Slavic languages ​​have many words in common with other Indo-European languages. Many Slavic words are similar to the corresponding English ones, for example: sister – sister,three - three,nose - nose,night and etc. In other cases, the common origin of the words is less clear. Russian word see related to Latin videre, Russian word five related to German funf, Latin quinque(cf. musical term quintet), Greek penta, which is present, for example, in a borrowed word pentagon(lit. "pentagon") .

An important role in the system of Slavic consonantism is played by palatalization - the approach of the flat middle part of the tongue to the palate when pronouncing a sound. Almost all consonants in Slavic languages ​​can be either hard (non-palatalized) or soft (palatalized). In the field of phonetics, there are also some significant differences between the Slavic languages. In Polish and Kashubian, for example, two nasalized (nasal) vowels have been preserved - ą and ERROR, disappeared in other Slavic languages. Slavic languages ​​differ greatly in stress. In Czech, Slovak and Sorbian, the stress usually falls on the first syllable of a word; in Polish - to the penultimate one; in Serbo-Croatian, any syllable can be stressed except for the last one; in Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian, the stress can fall on any syllable of a word.

All Slavic languages, except Bulgarian and Macedonian, have several types of declension of nouns and adjectives, which change in six or seven cases, in numbers and in three genders. The presence of seven cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, local or prepositional and vocative) testifies to the archaism of the Slavic languages ​​and their closeness to the Indo-European language, which supposedly had eight cases. An important feature of the Slavic languages ​​is the category of the verb aspect: every verb belongs either to the perfect or to the imperfect aspect and denotes, respectively, either a completed, or a lasting or repetitive action.

The habitat of the Slavic tribes in Eastern Europe in the 5th–8th centuries. AD expanded rapidly, and by the 8th c. the common Slavic language spread from the north of Russia to the south of Greece and from the Elbe and the Adriatic Sea to the Volga. Up to the 8th or 9th c. it was basically a single language, but gradually the differences between the territorial dialects became more noticeable. By the 10th c. there were already predecessors of modern Slavic languages.