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  • 1.
    Slavic languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Article about the closely related languages of the Slavic peoples, with speakers in most of Eastern Europe, much of the Balkans, parts of Central Europe, and the ...
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavic_languages
  • 2.
    West Slavic: Definition from Answers.com
  • West Slavic n. A subdivision of the Slavic languages that includes Czech, Polish, Slovak, and ... for the most part, Slavic languages are spoken in E Europe ...
  • http://www.answers.com/topic/slavic-languages
Questions/Answers
slavic languages?
is there any one learning czech or polish or already speak one or both because i am learning czech and what is the hardest slavic language to learn
I learned Russian in the Army. From what I know, all Slavic languages are about the same in difficulty. And Slavic languages are difficult to learn. Unlike Romance languages, verb conjugation, at least in Russian, is fairly easy. Noun declension, however, is much more difficult. Because they apparently diverged fairly recently, you can pick up the gist of one Slavic language if you know another.
How do I sell a very specialdictionary from English to oneof the South Slavic languages?
For almost one year I have been working on a very special dictionary, which I would like to offer to someone for sale. The dictionary is two way, English to South Slavic languages, and I am pretty sure that something like this does not exist for this language pair. It is in electronic form and will be continuously upgraded. Does anyone know a possible buyer? Thanks.
free sites to promote on http://www.sellit-right.com [free] http://www.classifieds.com and [free]http://www.usfreeads.com [usa] Create a blog to talk about what you do, allow comments and keep it up to date and to start doing that use http://www.wordpress.com Create aYoutube video to talk about your Biz - if youre ashy guy lol you can get someone else to do it for you or have a blank screen -hmm dunno. But Youtube is another way.
How different is Russian fromother Slavic languages?
Like Polish, Czech, etc. Just wondering, because I'm studying Russian and I want to know how different it is from the other Slavic languages.
all slavic languages are pretty close to each other, they say that if you know one slavic language you can understand about 30% of another. I know in russian there are 6 different cases, while polish has 7, czech don't know, also around 6. But russian has no present tense of "to be" while czech does. plus in Russian you have endings like -ая where in polish you will have just -a. it seems that they shorten the endings in other slavic languages, and quite a few of the words are interchangable, expect for the verb in russian "to remember" means "to forget" in polish and "to forget" in russian means "to remember" in polish. but if you already know one slavic language well, it will be easy to learn another slavic language. so, if you know russian you might understand a couple words in polish or czech, but you'll have trouble really understanding what is said
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