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Noch mal hier für alle Hobbyhistoriker zum mitschreiben wen ihr einwende habt bitte an diese Universität schicken.
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Oder an die Oxford University Press: New York City. Comrie, Bernard, "Slavonic Languages," pp. 322-328 in The World's Major Languages, ed. by Bernard Comrie. New York: Oxford University Press
Indo-European Languages: Balto-Slavic Family
South Slavic
Modern South Slavic languages can be divided into two groups: Western and Eastern. Western South Slavic languages include Serbo-Croatian (Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian) and Slovenian; Eastern South Slavic languages include Bulgarian and Macedonian (not genetically related to the Greek dialect of Alexander the Great). These languages are mostly spoken in the Balkans, especially in Bulgaria and [what was] Yugoslavia. Unlike Serbo-Croatian and Slovenian, Bulgarian and Macedonian have some linguistic features borrowed from non-Slavic Balkan languages, particularly Greek and Albanian.
Like the East Slavic languages, the South Slavic languages were strongly influenced by Old Church Slavonic. In fact Old Church Slavonic is often considered to be a South Slavic language, though it also seems to be closely related to the Proto-Slavic language from which all Slavic languages descended. The first modern South Slavic language to be written appears to be Slovenian, in the 10th century.
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The World's major languages - Bernard Comrie - Google Books
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