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{{Short description|Language family}}
[[Image:Slavic_europe.png|thumb|275px|right|
{{Infobox language family
{{legend|#7cdc87|Countries where a ] is the national language}}
| name = East Slavic
{{legend|#008000|Countries where an '''East Slavic language''' is the national language}}
| region = ] (], ], and the ])
{{legend|#004040|Countries where a ] is the national language}}]]
| familycolor = Indo-European
The '''East Slavic languages''' constitute one of three regional subgroups of ], currently spoken in ]. It is the group with the largest numbers of speakers, far out-numbering the ] and ] groups. Current East Slavic languages are ], ], ], and ] (a small language spoken in Eastern Slovakia, South Eastern Poland, Eastern Hungary and South Western Ukraine and regarded by many as a Ukrainian dialect).
| fam2 = ]
| fam3 = ]
| ancestor = ]
| ancestor2 = ]
| ancestor3 = ]
| ancestor4 = ]
| child1 = ]
| child2 = ]
| child3 = ]
| child4 = ]
| iso5 = zle
| glotto = east1426
| glottorefname = East Slavic
| altname =
}}


The '''East Slavic languages''' constitute one of three regional subgroups of the ], distinct from the ] and ]. East Slavic languages are currently spoken natively throughout ], and eastwards to ] and the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации |url=http://publication.pravo.gov.ru/Document/View/0001201811040002?index=0&rangeSize=1 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220205162518/http://publication.pravo.gov.ru/Document/View/0001201811040002?index=0&rangeSize=1 |archive-date=February 5, 2022 |access-date=2018-11-04 |website=publication.pravo.gov.ru}}</ref> In part due to the large historical influence of the ] and the ], the ] language is also spoken as a ] in many regions of ] and ]. Of the three Slavic branches, East Slavic is the most spoken, with the number of native speakers larger than the Western and Southern branches combined.
Classification:
* ]
** ]
*** ]
**** ]
***** ''East Slavic languages'' or ]&nbsp;†
****** ]&nbsp;†
******* ]
****** ]&nbsp;†
******* ]
******* ]
******* ]


The common consensus is that ], ] and ] are the extant East Slavic languages.{{sfn|Sussex|Cubberley|2006|pp=79–89}} Some linguists also consider ] a separate language,{{sfn|Pugh|2009|p=7}}{{sfn|Moser|2016|p=124-139}} although it is sometimes considered a dialect of Ukrainian.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Dulichenko, Aleksandr ''The language of Carpathian Rus': Genetic Aspects'' |url=http://www.rusyn.org/images/1.%20Language%20of%20Carpathian%20Rus'.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130625103006/http://www.rusyn.org/images/1.%20Language%20of%20Carpathian%20Rus'.pdf |archive-date=2013-06-25 |access-date=2009-12-12}}</ref>


The modern East Slavic languages descend from a ] spoken in ] from the 9th to 13th centuries, which later evolved into ], the chancery language of the ] in the ] river valley, and into medieval ] in the ] river valley, the language of the Russian principalities including the ].


All these languages use the ], but with particular modifications. ] and ], which are descendants of ], have a tradition of using ]—the ] and the ] alphabets, respectively (also Rusyn uses Latin in some regions, e.g. in ]).<ref name="ComrieCorbett2003">{{cite book|last1=Comrie|first1=Bernard|authorlink1=Bernard Comrie|last2=Corbett|first2=Greville G.|title=The Slavonic Languages|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uRF9Yiso1OIC&pg=PA45|accessdate=22 November 2017|date=1 September 2003|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-203-21320-9|page=45|quote=...following Vuk's reform of Cyrillic in the early nineteenth century, Ljudevit Gaj in the 1830s performed the same operation on Latinica, using the Czech system and producing a one-to-one symbol correlation between Cyrillic and Latinica as applied to the Serbian and Croatian parallel systems|archive-date=15 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170215081739/https://books.google.com/books?id=uRF9Yiso1OIC&pg=PA45}}</ref>
== Current status ==


== Distribution ==
All these languages are nowadays considered to be separate languages in their own right, though in the 19th century it was usual to call Ukrainian ("Little Russian") and Belarusian ("White Russian") dialects of one common "Russian" language (the most prestigious dialect of which was called "Great Russian"). Despite the vast territory occupied by the East Slavs, their languages are astonishingly similar to one another, with transitional dialects in border regions.
] in ]]]
] in ]]]
] in ]]]


== Classification ==
All these languages use the ] ], but with particular modifications.
Modern East Slavic languages include Belarusian, Russian and Ukrainian. The Rusyn language is sometimes considered the fourth living language of the group, its status as an independent language being the subject of scientific debate.<ref name="Moser2016">{{Cite journal |last=Moser |first=Michael A. |year=2018 |title=The Fate of the Ruthenian or Little Russian (Ukrainian) Language in Austrian Galicia (1772–1867) |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/44983536 |url-status=live |journal=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |volume=35 (2017–2018) |pages=124–139 |jstor=44983536 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210505215931/https://www.jstor.org/stable/44983536 |archive-date=5 May 2021 |access-date=28 June 2021 |number=1/4}}</ref>


== History == == Distinctive features ==


=== Vocabulary ===
When the common ] became separated from the ancient Slavic tongue common to all Slavs is difficult to ascertain (]&ndash;]).
The East Slavic territory exhibits a linguistic continuum with many transitional dialects. Between Belarusian and Ukrainian there is the ], which shares features from both languages. East Polesian is a transitional ] between Belarusian and Ukrainian on one hand, and between South Russian and Ukrainian on the other hand. At the same time, Belarusian and ] form a ], making it virtually impossible to draw a line between the two languages. ] or Middle Russian (with its Moscow sub-dialect), the transitional step between the North and the South, became a base for the Russian literary standard. ] with its predecessor, the ], has many original and archaic features.


Ruthenian, the ancestor of modern Belarusian and Ukrainian, was the official language of the ] as "Chancery Slavonic" until the end of the 17th century when it was gradually replaced by the Polish language. It was also the native language of the ] until the end of the 18th century, when the Ukrainian state completely became part of the Russian Empire in 1764.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Указ об учреждении губерний и о росписании к ним городов |url=https://constitution.garant.ru/history/act1600-1918/2005/ |access-date=2024-01-15 |website=constitution.garant.ru}}</ref> The ] from 1710 is one of the most important written sources of the Ruthenian language. Due to the influence of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth over many centuries, Belarusian and Ukrainian have been influenced in several respects by Polish, a ] ] language. As a result of the long Polish-Lithuanian rule, these languages had been less exposed to ], featuring therefore less Church Slavonicisms than the modern Russian language, for example:
The history of the East Slavic languages is a very 'hot' subject, because it is interpreted from various political perspectives by the East Slavs "like all mortals, wishing to have an origin as ancient as possible" ("sicut ceteri mortalium, originem suam quam vetustissimam ostendere cupientes"), as ] observed in his ''Historia Bohemica'' in ].
{| class="wikitable"

|+Comparison of the word "sweet"
Therefore, a crucial differentiation has to be made between the history of the East Slavic ''dialects'' and that of the ''literary languages'' employed by the Eastern Slavs. Although most ancient texts betray the dialect their author(s) and/or scribe(s) spoke, it is also clearly visible that they tried to write in a language different from their dialects and to avoid those mistakes that enable us nowadays to locate them.
!Ukrainian
!Belarusian
!Russian
|-
|солодкий (''solodkyj'')
|салодкі (''salodki'')
|сладкий (''sladkij'')
|}
Additionally, the original East Slavic phonetic form was kept in many words in Ukrainian and Belarusian, for example:
{| class="wikitable"
|+Comparison of the word "unit"
!Ukrainian
!Belarusian
!Russian
|-
|одиниця (''odynycia'')
|адзінка (''adzinka'')
|eдиница (''yedinica'')
|}
In general, Ukrainian and Belarusian are also closer to other Western European languages, especially to ] (via Polish). At the same time Russian was being heavily influenced by Church Slavonic (South Slavic language), but also by the ] and ] languages.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-02-14 |title=Turkic words in Russian |url=https://www.languagesoftheworld.info/historical-linguistics/turkic-words-in-russian.html |access-date=2024-01-15 |website=Languages Of The World |language=en-US}}</ref> For example:
{| class="wikitable"
|+Comparison of the word "to search"
!Ukrainian
!Belarusian
!Russian
|-
|шукати (''šukaty'')
|шукаць (''šukać'')
|искать (''iskat́'')
|-
| colspan="2" |Compare Polish "szukać" and ] "sōkian" (German "suchen")
|Compare Bulgarian "искам" (''iskam'') (with a meaning shift: "to want") and Serbo-Croatian "искати" (''iskati'')
|}
What's more, all three languages do also have ], that sometimes can lead to (big) misunderstandings.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Database of False Friends in Slavic Languages |url=https://oesteuropastudier.dk/en/dictionaries/fauxamis |access-date=2024-01-16 |website=Danish Portal for East European Studies |language=en-gb}}</ref> For example, Ukrainian орати (''oraty'') — "to plow" and Russian орать (''orat́'') — "to scream", or Ukrainian помітити (''pomityty'') — "to notice" and Russian пометить (''pometit́'') — "to mark".


===Orthography===
In both cases one has to keep in mind that the history of the East Slavic languages is of course a history of written ]. We do not know how the writers of the preserved texts would have spoken in every-day life, let alone how an illiterate East Slavic peasant spoke to his family.


==== Alphabet ====
=== History of the literary languages ===
The alphabets of the East Slavic languages are all written in the Cyrillic script, however each of them has their own letters and pronunciations. Russian and Ukrainian have 33 letters, while Belarusian has 32. Additionally, Belarusian and Ukrainian use the ] (') for the ], which has the same function as the letter Ъ in Russian.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left; empty-cells: hide; font-size: 0.9em"
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="font-size: 85%; border: gray solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse; text-align: center;"
|+Cyrillic alphabets comparison table
|-
! colspan="14" style="text-align: center;" | '''History of the East Slavic ]''' ! colspan="39" style="text-align: center" |East Slavic languages
|- |-
!Russian
|
! align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | History of ]
! align="center" style="background: #ddffdd;" | History of ]
! align="center" style="background: #ffdddd;" | History of ]
|- |Г
|
| valign="top" align="left" | '''Preliterary''' period<br>(c.&nbsp;until 9th/11th&nbsp;c.)
| style="background: #ececec;" colspan="3" align="center" | ] dialects of the ''']'''
|- |Е
|
| valign="top" align="left" | '''Old''' period<br>(c.&nbsp;9th/11th to 14th&nbsp;c.)
| style="background: #ececec;" align="center" colspan="3" | ''']'''
|- |Ж
| valign="top" align="left" | '''Middle''' period<br>(c.&nbsp;15th to 18th&nbsp;c.)
| align="center" valign="top" colspan="2" style="background: #ddeeee;" | ''']'''
|
| align="center" valign="top" style="background: #ffdddd;" | ''']'''
|- |
| valign="top" align="left" | '''Modern''' period<br>(c.&nbsp;from 18th/19th&nbsp;c.)
| align="center" valign="top" style="background: #ddddff;" | (Contemporary)<br>''']'''
| align="center" valign="top" style="background: #ddffdd;" | (Contemporary)<br>''']'''
| align="center" valign="top" style="background: #ffdddd;" | (Contemporary)<br>''']'''
|
|-
!Belarusian
|
|
|
|
|
|'
|-
!Ukrainian
|
|
|'
|
|
|} |}
Some letters, that are not included in the alphabet of a language, can be written as ]. For example, the sound values of the letter Ё, which doesn't exist in the Ukrainian alphabet, can be written as ЙО (ЬО before and after consonants), while the letter Щ in Russian and Ukrainian corresponds to ШЧ in Belarusian (compare Belarusian плошча and Ukrainian площа ("area")).


There are also different rules of usage for certain letters, e.g. the ] (Ь) cannot be written after the letter Ц in Russian, because the consonant /tsʲ/ does not exist in the Russian language, while in Ukrainian and especially Belarusian, on the contrary, it is relatively common (Ukrainian ць etymologically corresponds to Russian and Belarusian ц; Belarusian ць etymologically corresponds to Russian and Ukrainian ть). Moreover, the letter Щ in standard Russian is always pronounced softly (]).
What follows is a short overview over the Old and Middle periods. For more detail see ], ], and ].


Standard Ukrainian, unlike all the other Slavic languages (excl. ]), does not exhibit ]. Nevertheless, this rule is not that clear when listening to colloquial Ukrainian. It's one of the typical deviations that occur in the Ukrainian spoken language.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Фонетика й вимова - Олександр Пономарів |url=http://ponomariv-kultura-slova.wikidot.com/fonetyka |access-date=2022-11-11 |website=ponomariv-kultura-slova.wikidot.com}}</ref>
After the conversion of the East Slavic region to Christianity the people used service books borrowed from ], which were written in "Old Bulgarian" or ]. They continued to use this language, or rather a variant thereof, usually called (Middle) ], not only in liturgy, but also generally as the language of learning and written communication. This left a large imprint even on the rare secular texts.


==== Different sound values of letters ====
Throughout the Middle Ages (and in some way up to the present day) there existed a duality between the Church Slavonic language used as some kind of 'higher' register (not only) in religious texts and the popular tongue used as a 'lower' register for secular texts. It has been suggested to describe this situation as ], although there do exist mixed texts where it is sometimes very hard to determine why a given author used a popular or a Church Slavonic form in a given context.
Besides the differences of the alphabets, some letters represent different sounds depending on the language. For example, the letter И (romanized as ''I'' for Russian and ''Y'' for Ukrainian) in Russian is mostly pronounced as {{IPA|/i/}} (identical with the Ukrainian І), while in Ukrainian it's mostly pronounced as {{IPA|/ɪ/}} (very similar to the Russian Ы). Other examples:

{| class="wikitable"
=== History of the dialects ===
|+"False friends"

! colspan="2" |Letter
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="font-size: 85%; border: gray solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse; text-align: center;"
!Pronunciation
|-
! colspan="12" style="text-align: center;" | '''History of the East Slavic ] groups'''
|- |-
|Belarusian and Russian Е
|
|Ukrainian {{lang|uk|Є}}
! align="center" colspan="3" style="background: #ddddff;" | History of ]
|{{IPA|/je/, /ʲe/}}
! align="center" colspan="4" style="background: #ddffdd;" | History of ]
! align="center" colspan="4" style="background: #ffdddd;" | History of ]
|- |-
|Belarusian and Russian Э
| align="left" | '''Preliterary'''
|Ukrainian {{lang|uk|Е}}
| style="background: #ececec;" align="center" colspan="10" | ] dialects of the ''']'''
|{{IPA|/e/}}
| align="center" rowspan="2" | ]
|- |-
|Belarusian and Russian Ы
| align="left" | '''11th&nbsp;c.'''
|Ukrainian {{lang|uk|И}}
| align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | ]/<br>]
|{{IPA|/ɨ/}} (B. and R.), {{IPA|/ɪ/}} (U.)
| align="center" colspan="4" style="background: #ddeeee;" | ]/<br>]
| align="center" colspan="3" style="background: #eeeedd;" | ]/<br>]
| align="center" colspan="2" style="background: #ffdddd;" | ]/<br>]
|- |-
|Belarusian and Ukrainian І
| rowspan="2" align="left" | '''today'''
|Russian {{lang|ru|И}}
| colspan="3" align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | ]
|{{IPA|/i/, /ʲi/}}
| colspan="4" align="center" style="background: #ddffdd;" | ]
| colspan="4" align="center" style="background: #ffdddd;" | ]
|- |-
|Belarusian and Ukrainian Г
| align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | SW
|no sound in Russian
| align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | SE
|{{IPA|/ɣ/, /ɦ/}}
| align="center" style="background: #ddddff;" | N
| align="center" style="background: #ddffdd;" | SW
| colspan="2" align="center" style="background: #ddffdd;" | C
| align="center" style="background: #ddffdd;" | NE
| align="center" style="background: #ffdddd;" | S
| align="center" style="background: #ffdddd;" | C
| colspan="2" align="center" style="background: #ffdddd;" | N
|-
| height="0" width="16%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="4%" |
| height="0" width="4%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="8%" |
| height="0" width="0%" |
|- |-
|Russian {{lang|ru|Г}}
| align="left" colspan="12" | Dialect classification and periodization according to Yury &#352;erech , ''Problems in the formation of Belorussian'', New York 1953 (=&nbsp;''Word: Journal of the Linguistic Circle of New York'', vol.&nbsp;9, supplement, monograph no.&nbsp;2), p.&nbsp;93.
|Ukrainian {{lang|uk|Ґ}}
|{{IPA|/ɡ/}}
|} |}
{{sectstub}}


===Phonology===
The first divergence among the Old East Slavic texts is evident during the ], during the era of Kievan Rus', i.e. some texts can be linguistically located to areas that are now in Russia, Ukraine or Belarus. This leads many Russian scholars to speak of the existence of a separate ] as early as the ].{{fact}}
{{unreferenced section|date=November 2014}}
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
! ]es
! ]
! Standard Russian<br /> (Moscow dialect)
! ]
! Standard Belarusian
! Standard Ukrainian
! Examples
|-
! scope="row" | reduction<br />of unstressed {{IPA|/o/}} (])
| no || colspan="3" | yes<ref group=n>Except for the Polesian dialect of ]</ref> || no<ref group=n>Except for the Eastern ]n dialect</ref> || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|голова́}} {{IPA|/ɡɐlɐˈva/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|галава́}} {{IPA|/ɣalaˈva/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|голова́}} {{IPA|/ɦɔlɔˈʋa/}}<br>"head"
|-
! scope="row" | pretonic {{IPA|/ʲe/}} (])
| {{IPA|/ʲe/}} || {{IPA|/ʲi/}} || colspan="2" | {{IPA|/ʲa/}} || {{IPA|/e/}}<ref group=n>Consonants are hard before {{IPA|/e/}}</ref> || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|земля́}} {{IPA|/zʲiˈmlʲa/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|зямля́}} {{IPA|/zʲaˈmlʲa/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|земля́}} {{IPA|/zeˈmlʲa/}}<br>"earth"
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''i''
| colspan="4" | {{IPA|/i/}} || rowspan="2" | {{IPA|/ɪ/}}<ref group=n>Except for some dialects</ref> || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|лист}} {{IPA|/ˈlʲist/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|ліст}} {{IPA|/ˈlʲist/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|лист}} {{IPA|/ˈlɪst/}}<br>"leaf"
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''y''
| colspan="4" | {{IPA|/ɨ/}} || {{nowrap|R./B. {{wikt-lang|ru|ты}} {{IPA|/ˈtɨ/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|ти}} {{IPA|/ˈtɪ/}}<br>"thou, you"}}
|-
! scope="row" | stressed CoC
| colspan="4" | {{IPA|/o/}} || rowspan="2" | {{IPA|/i/}}<ref group=n>In some Ukrainian dialects C{{IPA|/o/}}C can be {{IPA|/y~y̯e~y̯i~u̯o/}}</ref><ref group=n>In some Ukrainian dialects PSl *''ě'' can be {{IPA|/e̝~i̯ɛ/}}</ref> || {{nowrap|R. {{wikt-lang|ru|ночь}} {{IPA|/ˈnot͡ɕ/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|ноч}} {{IPA|/ˈnot͡ʂ/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|ніч}} {{IPA|/ˈnʲit͡ʃ/}}<br>"night"}}
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''ě''
| {{IPA|/e̝~i̯ɛ~i/}} || colspan="3" | {{IPA|/e/}} || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|се́мя}} {{IPA|/ˈsʲemʲa/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|се́мя}} {{IPA|/ˈsʲemʲa/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|сі́м'я}} {{IPA|/ˈsʲimja/}}<br>"seed"
|-
! scope="row" | /e/>/o/ change before nonpalatalized consonants<ref group=n>Also at the end of words (in Russian and Belarusian). In Belarusian (unlike Russian), the change is not present in stressed 2 and 3 sg. pres. ind. endings.</ref>
| always || colspan="3" | under stress || after /j/, /nʲ/, /lʲ/, /ʒ/, /ʃ/, /t͡ʃ/ || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|зелёный}} {{IPA|/zʲiˈlʲonɨj/}}, <br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|зялёны}} {{IPA|/zʲaˈlʲonɨ/}}, <br> U. {{wikt-lang|uk|зеле́ний}} {{IPA|/zeˈlenɪj/}}<br>"green"
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''c''
| colspan="4" | {{IPA|/t͡s/}}<ref group=n>Can be {{IPA|/s/}} in South Russian</ref><ref group=n name="c">In some Northern Russian dialects, Proto-Slavic *''c'' and *''č'' have merged into one sound, variously pronounced as {{IPA|/t͡s, t͡sʲ, t͡ʂ, t͡ɕ/}} depending on a dialect.</ref> || {{IPA|/t͡s, t͡sʲ/}} ||R. волчица (volčica)
B. ваўчыца (vaŭčyca)
U. вовчиця (vovčyc’a)
”female wolf”
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''č''
| colspan="3" | {{IPA|/t͡ɕ/}}<ref group=n>Can be {{IPA|/ɕ/}} in Southern Russian</ref><ref group=n name="c"/> || {{IPA|/t͡ʂ/}} || {{IPA|/t͡ʃ/}} || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|час}} {{IPA|/ˈt͡ɕas/}}<br> "hour",<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|час}} {{IPA|/ˈt͡ʂas/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|час}} {{IPA|/ˈt͡ʃas/}}<br>"time"
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''skj'', ''zgj''
| colspan="3" | {{IPA|/ɕː/}},<ref group=n>Can be {{IPA|/ɕt͡ɕ/}}, {{IPA|/ʂː/}}</ref> {{IPA|/ʑː/}} || {{IPA|/ʂt͡ʂ/}}, {{IPA|/ʐd͡ʐ/}} || {{IPA|/ʃt͡ʃ/}}, {{IPA|/ʒd͡ʒ/}} ||R. ещё /jeˈɕːo/
B. яшчэ /jaˈʂt͡ʂe/
U. ще /ʃt͡ʃe/
“yet”
|-
! scope="row" | soft ]s
| colspan="3" | {{IPA|/tʲ/}}, {{IPA|/dʲ/}}<ref group=n>In Russian light affrication can occur: {{IPA|}} , {{IPA|}}</ref> || {{IPA|/t͡sʲ/}}, {{IPA|/d͡zʲ/}} || {{IPA|/tʲ/}}, {{IPA|/dʲ/}} || {{nowrap|R. {{wikt-lang|ru|де́сять}} {{IPA|/ˈdʲesʲitʲ/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|дзе́сяць}} {{IPA|/ˈd͡zʲesʲat͡sʲ/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|де́сять}} {{IPA|/ˈdesʲatʲ/}}<br>"ten"}}
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''v''
| colspan="2" | {{IPA|/v, f/}}<ref group=n>In some Northern Russian sub-dialects {{IPA|/v/}} is not devoiced to {{IPA|/f/}}</ref> || {{IPA|/w/}} || {{IPA|/v/}}<br>{{IPA|}} || {{IPA|/ʋ/}}<br>{{IPA|}}
/u̯/ (at the end of a closed syllable)
| {{nowrap|R. {{wikt-lang|ru|о́стров}} {{IPA|/ˈostraf/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|во́страў}} {{IPA|/ˈvostrau̯/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|о́стрів}} {{IPA|/ˈostriu̯/}}<br>"island"}}
|-
! scope="row" | {{IPA|/f/}} (in loanwords)
| colspan="2" | {{IPA|/f/}} || {{IPA|/x~xv~xw~xu̯/}} || colspan="2" | {{IPA|/f/}} ||
|-
! scope="row" | Prothetic {{IPA|/v~w~u̯/}}
| colspan="2" | no<ref group=n>Except for ''восемь'' "eight" and some others</ref> || colspan="3" | yes || {{nowrap|R. {{wikt-lang|ru|о́стров}} {{IPA|/ˈostraf/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|во́страў}} {{IPA|/ˈvostrau̯/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|о́стрів}} {{IPA|/ˈostriu̯/}}<br>"island"}}
|-
! scope="row" |] *''g''
| colspan="2" | {{IPA|/ɡ/}} || colspan="2" | {{IPA|/ɣ/}} || {{IPA|/ɦ/}} || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|голова́}} {{IPA|/ɡɐlɐˈva/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|галава́}} {{IPA|/ɣalaˈva/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|голова́}} {{IPA|/ɦɔlɔˈʋa/}}<br>"head"
|-
|-
! scope="row" | Hardening of final soft ]
| colspan="2" | no || colspan="3" | yes ||R. {{wikt-lang|ru|степь}} /sʲtʲepʲ/,
B. стэп /stɛp/,
U. {{wikt-lang|uk|степ}} /stɛp/


"steppe"
== Mutual Influences ==
|-
=== Old Belarusian ===
! scope="row" | Hardening of soft {{IPA|/rʲ/}}
==== Old Belarusian and Russian ====
| colspan="3" | no || yes || hardened at the end of a closed syllable and not hardened elsewere ||R. матерь (máter’)
By the sheer number of the printed books, the Old Belarusian of the 16th-17th surpassed the contemporary Great Russian (Muscovite)<!-- Karskiy V.1 Ch.8 -->. It is sometimes considered, although contended, too, that the even the printing tradition in 16th cent. Muscovy had been initiated either by ] during his visit to ] (c.1520s) or by another Belarusian printer, ] ({{lang-be|Пётр Мсціславец}}); c.1564), together with Muscovite ].
B. Вікторыя (Viktoryja)
U. кобзар (kobzár (nominative case)
кобзаря (kobzar’á (genetive case)
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *''CrьC, ClьC,<br/>CrъC, CrъC''
| colspan="3" | {{IPA|/rʲe/}}, {{IPA|/lʲe/}},<br/>{{IPA|/ro/}}, {{IPA|/lo/}} || {{IPA|/rɨ/}}, /ro/, {{IPA|/lʲi/}}, {{IPA|/lɨ/}} || {{IPA|/rɪ/}}, {{IPA|/lɪ/}},<br/>{{IPA|/ro/}}, {{IPA|/lo/}}||Protoslavic. ‘*kry (singular accusative case. krьvь);
R. кровь (krov’), кровавый (krovávyj)
B. кроў (kroŭ), крывавы (kryvávy)
U. кров (krov), кривавий (kryvávyj)
”blood, bloody”
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic *-''ъj-'', -''ьj''-
| colspan="3" | {{IPA|/oj/}}, {{IPA|/ej/}} || {{IPA|/ɨj/}}, {{IPA|/ij/}} || {{IPA|/ɪj/}} ||
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic adj. end. *''-ьjь''
| {{IPA|/ej/}} || {{IPA|/ij/}},<ref group=n name=chsl>Only unstressed, ] influence</ref> {{IPA|/ej/}} || {{IPA|/ej/}}<ref group=n>Stressed, unstressed is usually reduced to {{IPA|}}</ref> || {{IPA|/ij/}} || {{IPA|/ɪj/}}, {{IPA|/ij/}} ||
|-
! scope="row" | Proto-Slavic adj. end. *''-ъjь''
| {{IPA|/oj/}} || {{IPA|/ɨj/}},<ref group=n name=chsl/> {{IPA|/oj/}} || {{IPA|/oj/}}<ref group=n>Stressed, unstressed is usually reduced to {{IPA|}}</ref> || {{IPA|/ɨj/}} || {{IPA|/ɪj/}} ||
|-
! scope="row" | Loss of the vocative case
| no || colspan="3" | yes<ref group=n>In colloquial Russian, new vocative has appeared from a pure stem: мам, пап, Маш, Вань etc.</ref> || no ||
|-
! scope="row" | 3 sg. & pl. pres. ind.
| colspan="2" | {{IPA|/t/}} || {{IPA|/tʲ/}} || {{IPA|/t͡sʲ/}} || {{IPA|/tʲ/}} || {{nowrap|R. {{wikt-lang|ru|ду́мают}} {{IPA|/ˈdumajut/}},<br>B. {{lang|be|ду́маюць}} {{IPA|/ˈdumajut͡sʲ/}},<br>Uk. {{lang|uk|ду́мають}} {{IPA|/ˈdumajutʲ/}}<br>"(they) think"}}
|-
! scope="row" | Dropping out<br />of 3 sg. pres. ind. ending (in ''e''-stems)
| colspan="2" | no || colspan="3" | yes ||R. скажет (skážet)
B. скажа (skáža)
U. скаже (skáže)
”(he/she) will say”
|-
! scope="row" | 3 sg. masc. past ind.
| {{IPA|/v~w~u̯/}}<ref group=n>In the dialect of ]</ref> || colspan="2" | {{IPA|/l/}} || colspan="2" | {{IPA|/u̯/}}|| R. {{wikt-lang|ru|ду́мал}} {{IPA|/ˈdumal/}},<br>B. {{lang|be|ду́маў}} {{IPA|/ˈdumau̯/}},<br>U. {{lang|uk|ду́мав}} {{IPA|/ˈdumau̯/}}<br>"(he) thought"
|-
! scope="row" | ] in oblique cases
| colspan="3" | no || colspan="2" | yes || R. {{wikt-lang|ru|рука|руке́}} {{IPA|/ruˈkʲe/}},<br>B. {{wikt-lang|be|рука|руцэ́}} {{IPA|/ruˈt͡se/}},<br>U. {{wikt-lang|uk|рука|руці́}} {{IPA|/ruˈt͡sʲi/}}<br>"hand"<br>(] or ])
|}


===Notes===
It is worth noting, that not only the literature in Old Belarusian, but also the Orthodox literature in ], if printed in GDL, had been met with certain suspicion and even with hostility in the contemporary Muscovy, being perceived as «spoiled by the Latin and Polish influences» and highly «un-Orthodox». It had come to book-burnings, e.g., in c.1530 (books of Skaryna) and in 1627 (books of Greek-Catholic author Trankvilion-Stawravyetski). In 1627 and in 1672, there had been decrees issued, forbidding buying or owning books «of Lithuanian print».<!-- refs will follow -->
{{Reflist|group=n|2}}


==History==
==== Old Belarusian and Polish ====
According to Karskiy, the contemporary Belarusian vernacular had 65 words assimilated from the Polish language. However, in the Old Belarusian literary tradition, especially in the 16th-17th centuries, there had been much more of Polonisms. By the 17th cent., the numerous Polonisms had entered even the Orthodox texts. The main causes for that were:
* State promotion of the Catholic Church over the Orthodox Church.
* Gradual strengthening of the Polish administration.
* Gradual transition to the Polish language in the administrative and judicial use.


===Influence of Church Slavonic===
==== Old Belarusian and Ukrainian ====
After the conversion of the East Slavic region to Christianity the people used service books borrowed from ], which were written in ] (a ]).{{sfn|Sussex|Cubberley|2006|pp=63–65}} The Church Slavonic language was strictly used only in text, while the colloquial language of the ] was communicated in its spoken form.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
] and, next, ] had pointed out that the «Belarusian-Ukrainian language sameness<!-- I’m lost for a word to translate «общность»-->» isn’t reflecting some drive for the preservation of some ancient ethnical traditions, but rather an outcome of the complicated inter-relations of three proto-nations in the 13th-14th – 17th-18th centuries.


Throughout the Middle Ages (and in some way up to the present day) there existed a duality between the Church Slavonic language used as some kind of 'higher' register (not only) in religious texts and the popular tongue used as a 'lower' register for secular texts. It has been suggested to describe this situation as '']'', although there do exist mixed texts where it is sometimes very hard to determine why a given author used a popular or a Church Slavonic form in a given context. Church Slavonic was a major factor in the evolution of modern Russian, where there still exists a "high stratum" of words that were imported from this language.{{sfn|Sussex|Cubberley|2006|pp=477–478}}
The common features of the Belarusian and Ukrainian phonetics and morphology in the 14th–17th centuries were<!-- V.1 -->:
* changing of the hard «л» to the «ў» in some positions;
* hardening of the «ж», «ч», «ш», «щ»;
* developing of the affricate «дж», taking the place of the Proto-Slavonic «дј»;
* doubling of the consonants in «consonant-ј-vowel» positions;
* hardening of the labials in the ends of the words and before the «ј»;
* loosing of the syllabic nature of the «и» and «у», when not stressed or after the vowels;
* changing of the (Old Russian) participles, ending with «-а», «-я» with the adverbial participles, ending with «-учи», «-ючи», «-ачи», «-ячи».


==See also==
There are other phonetical and grammatical similarities, originating in the historical (Old) Belarusian and Ukrainian languages mutual influence, e.g., the stressing of the noun preferred in the «preposition+noun» etc.<!-- Обзор звуков і форм -->
* ]


==References==
In the Old Belarusian ''literary'' language, the Ukrainisms had been known to occur since the 15th cent., in the form of the reduction of YERI to I. The Ukrainisms had been encountered mainly in the literary artifacts based on the Old Ukrainian sources, e.g., in «Камянецкая Чэцця-мінея» (1489). Still more of the Ukraininisms had been entering the Old Belarusian literary forms in the 1st half of the 17th cent., esp., after the transferring of the centre of the Orthodox printing and publishing from ] to ]. Notable in this aspect are:
{{Reflist}}
* Мазырскі спіс «Александрыі» (1697).
* Маскоўскі (беларускі) спіс «Дыярыуша Філіповіча» (1638–1648).
* Сматрыцкі «Евангелле вучыцельнае» (1616).
* Сматрыцкі «Казанне пахавальнае» (1620).


==Sources==
{{sectstub}}
* {{Cite book|last=Moser|first=Michael A.|chapter=Rusyn: A New-Old Language In-between Nations and States|title=The Palgrave Handbook of Slavic Languages, Identities and Borders|year=2016|location=London|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|pages=124–139|doi=10.1007/978-1-137-34839-5_7|isbn=978-1-349-57703-3|chapter-url=https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-137-34839-5_7|access-date=16 October 2019|archive-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114121225/https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-137-34839-5_7|url-status=live}}
* {{Cite book|title=The Rusyn Language|last=Pugh|first=Stefan M.|year=2009|publisher=LINCOM GmbH|location=Munich, Germany|isbn=978-3-89586-940-2|url=https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/2WPXQMIRNX7WE2VPAI6JHAOSMXYMVH5P|access-date=15 December 2021|archive-date=15 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211215214401/https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/2WPXQMIRNX7WE2VPAI6JHAOSMXYMVH5P|url-status=live}}
*{{cite book
| last = Sussex
| first = Roland
| author-link = Roland Sussex
| last2 = Cubberley
| first2 = Paul
| title = The Slavic languages
| publisher = ]
| year = 2006
| location = ]
| isbn = 978-0-521-22315-7
}}


== See also == ==Further reading==
*{{cite book
| chapter = East Slavonic languages
| title = The Slavonic languages
| publisher = Routledge
| editor1-last= Comrie
| editor1-first = Bernard
| editor2-last= Corbett
| editor2-first = Greville G
| year = 1993
| location = London, New York
| pages = 827–1036
| isbn = 0-415-04755-2
}}


==External links==
* ]
{{Commons category}}
* ]
* by ], ''Window on Eurasia'' (March 24, 2024)
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


{{Slavic languages}} {{Slavic languages}}


{{Authority control}}
]


{{DEFAULTSORT:East Slavic Languages}}
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Latest revision as of 00:19, 1 December 2024

Language family
East Slavic
Geographic
distribution
Eurasia (Eastern Europe, Northern Asia, and the Caucasus)
Linguistic classificationIndo-European
Early formsProto-Indo-European
Subdivisions
Language codes
ISO 639-5zle
Glottologeast1426

The East Slavic languages constitute one of three regional subgroups of the Slavic languages, distinct from the West and South Slavic languages. East Slavic languages are currently spoken natively throughout Eastern Europe, and eastwards to Siberia and the Russian Far East. In part due to the large historical influence of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, the Russian language is also spoken as a lingua franca in many regions of Caucasus and Central Asia. Of the three Slavic branches, East Slavic is the most spoken, with the number of native speakers larger than the Western and Southern branches combined.

The common consensus is that Belarusian, Russian and Ukrainian are the extant East Slavic languages. Some linguists also consider Rusyn a separate language, although it is sometimes considered a dialect of Ukrainian.

The modern East Slavic languages descend from a common predecessor spoken in Kievan Rus' from the 9th to 13th centuries, which later evolved into Ruthenian, the chancery language of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Dnieper river valley, and into medieval Russian in the Volga river valley, the language of the Russian principalities including the Grand Duchy of Moscow.

All these languages use the Cyrillic script, but with particular modifications. Belarusian and Ukrainian, which are descendants of Ruthenian, have a tradition of using Latin-based alphabets—the Belarusian Lacinka and the Ukrainian Latynka alphabets, respectively (also Rusyn uses Latin in some regions, e.g. in Slovakia).

Distribution

Distribution of the Ukrainian language in Europe
Distribution of the Belarusian language in Europe
Distribution of the Russian language in Eurasia

Classification

Modern East Slavic languages include Belarusian, Russian and Ukrainian. The Rusyn language is sometimes considered the fourth living language of the group, its status as an independent language being the subject of scientific debate.

Distinctive features

Vocabulary

The East Slavic territory exhibits a linguistic continuum with many transitional dialects. Between Belarusian and Ukrainian there is the Polesian dialect, which shares features from both languages. East Polesian is a transitional variety between Belarusian and Ukrainian on one hand, and between South Russian and Ukrainian on the other hand. At the same time, Belarusian and Southern Russian form a continuous area, making it virtually impossible to draw a line between the two languages. Central or Middle Russian (with its Moscow sub-dialect), the transitional step between the North and the South, became a base for the Russian literary standard. Northern Russian with its predecessor, the Old Novgorod dialect, has many original and archaic features.

Ruthenian, the ancestor of modern Belarusian and Ukrainian, was the official language of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as "Chancery Slavonic" until the end of the 17th century when it was gradually replaced by the Polish language. It was also the native language of the Cossack Hetmanate until the end of the 18th century, when the Ukrainian state completely became part of the Russian Empire in 1764. The Constitution of Pylyp Orlyk from 1710 is one of the most important written sources of the Ruthenian language. Due to the influence of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth over many centuries, Belarusian and Ukrainian have been influenced in several respects by Polish, a Lechitic West Slavic language. As a result of the long Polish-Lithuanian rule, these languages had been less exposed to Church Slavonic, featuring therefore less Church Slavonicisms than the modern Russian language, for example:

Comparison of the word "sweet"
Ukrainian Belarusian Russian
солодкий (solodkyj) салодкі (salodki) сладкий (sladkij)

Additionally, the original East Slavic phonetic form was kept in many words in Ukrainian and Belarusian, for example:

Comparison of the word "unit"
Ukrainian Belarusian Russian
одиниця (odynycia) адзінка (adzinka) eдиница (yedinica)

In general, Ukrainian and Belarusian are also closer to other Western European languages, especially to German (via Polish). At the same time Russian was being heavily influenced by Church Slavonic (South Slavic language), but also by the Turkic and Uralic languages. For example:

Comparison of the word "to search"
Ukrainian Belarusian Russian
шукати (šukaty) шукаць (šukać) искать (iskat́)
Compare Polish "szukać" and Old Low German "sōkian" (German "suchen") Compare Bulgarian "искам" (iskam) (with a meaning shift: "to want") and Serbo-Croatian "искати" (iskati)

What's more, all three languages do also have false friends, that sometimes can lead to (big) misunderstandings. For example, Ukrainian орати (oraty) — "to plow" and Russian орать (orat́) — "to scream", or Ukrainian помітити (pomityty) — "to notice" and Russian пометить (pometit́) — "to mark".

Orthography

Alphabet

The alphabets of the East Slavic languages are all written in the Cyrillic script, however each of them has their own letters and pronunciations. Russian and Ukrainian have 33 letters, while Belarusian has 32. Additionally, Belarusian and Ukrainian use the apostrophe (') for the hard sign, which has the same function as the letter Ъ in Russian.

Cyrillic alphabets comparison table
East Slavic languages
Russian А Б В Г Д Е Ё Ж З И Й К Л М Н О П Р С Т У Ф Х Ц Ч Ш Щ Ъ Ы Ь Э Ю Я
Belarusian А Б В Г Д Е Ё Ж З І Й К Л М Н О П Р С Т У Ў Ф Х Ц Ч Ш ' Ы Ь Э Ю Я
Ukrainian А Б В Г Ґ Д Е Є Ж З И І Ї Й К Л М Н О П Р С Т У Ф Х Ц Ч Ш Щ ' Ь Ю Я

Some letters, that are not included in the alphabet of a language, can be written as digraphs. For example, the sound values of the letter Ё, which doesn't exist in the Ukrainian alphabet, can be written as ЙО (ЬО before and after consonants), while the letter Щ in Russian and Ukrainian corresponds to ШЧ in Belarusian (compare Belarusian плошча and Ukrainian площа ("area")).

There are also different rules of usage for certain letters, e.g. the soft sign (Ь) cannot be written after the letter Ц in Russian, because the consonant /tsʲ/ does not exist in the Russian language, while in Ukrainian and especially Belarusian, on the contrary, it is relatively common (Ukrainian ць etymologically corresponds to Russian and Belarusian ц; Belarusian ць etymologically corresponds to Russian and Ukrainian ть). Moreover, the letter Щ in standard Russian is always pronounced softly (palatalization).

Standard Ukrainian, unlike all the other Slavic languages (excl. Serbo-Croatian), does not exhibit final devoicing. Nevertheless, this rule is not that clear when listening to colloquial Ukrainian. It's one of the typical deviations that occur in the Ukrainian spoken language.

Different sound values of letters

Besides the differences of the alphabets, some letters represent different sounds depending on the language. For example, the letter И (romanized as I for Russian and Y for Ukrainian) in Russian is mostly pronounced as /i/ (identical with the Ukrainian І), while in Ukrainian it's mostly pronounced as /ɪ/ (very similar to the Russian Ы). Other examples:

"False friends"
Letter Pronunciation
Belarusian and Russian Е Ukrainian Є /je/, /ʲe/
Belarusian and Russian Э Ukrainian Е /e/
Belarusian and Russian Ы Ukrainian И /ɨ/ (B. and R.), /ɪ/ (U.)
Belarusian and Ukrainian І Russian И /i/, /ʲi/
Belarusian and Ukrainian Г no sound in Russian /ɣ/, /ɦ/
Russian Г Ukrainian Ґ /ɡ/

Phonology

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Isoglosses Northern
Russian
Standard Russian
(Moscow dialect)
Southern
Russian
Standard Belarusian Standard Ukrainian Examples
reduction
of unstressed /o/ (akanye)
no yes no R. голова́ /ɡɐlɐˈva/,
B. галава́ /ɣalaˈva/,
U. голова́ /ɦɔlɔˈʋa/
"head"
pretonic /ʲe/ (yakanye) /ʲe/ /ʲi/ /ʲa/ /e/ R. земля́ /zʲiˈmlʲa/,
B. зямля́ /zʲaˈmlʲa/,
U. земля́ /zeˈmlʲa/
"earth"
Proto-Slavic *i /i/ /ɪ/ R. лист /ˈlʲist/,
B. ліст /ˈlʲist/,
U. лист /ˈlɪst/
"leaf"
Proto-Slavic *y /ɨ/ R./B. ты /ˈtɨ/,
U. ти /ˈtɪ/
"thou, you"
stressed CoC /o/ /i/ R. ночь /ˈnot͡ɕ/,
B. ноч /ˈnot͡ʂ/,
U. ніч /ˈnʲit͡ʃ/
"night"
Proto-Slavic *ě /e̝~i̯ɛ~i/ /e/ R. се́мя /ˈsʲemʲa/,
B. се́мя /ˈsʲemʲa/,
U. сі́м'я /ˈsʲimja/
"seed"
/e/>/o/ change before nonpalatalized consonants always under stress after /j/, /nʲ/, /lʲ/, /ʒ/, /ʃ/, /t͡ʃ/ R. зелёный /zʲiˈlʲonɨj/,
B. зялёны /zʲaˈlʲonɨ/,
U. зеле́ний /zeˈlenɪj/
"green"
Proto-Slavic *c /t͡s/ /t͡s, t͡sʲ/ R. волчица (volčica)

B. ваўчыца (vaŭčyca) U. вовчиця (vovčyc’a) ”female wolf”

Proto-Slavic *č /t͡ɕ/ /t͡ʂ/ /t͡ʃ/ R. час /ˈt͡ɕas/
"hour",
B. час /ˈt͡ʂas/,
U. час /ˈt͡ʃas/
"time"
Proto-Slavic *skj, zgj /ɕː/, /ʑː/ /ʂt͡ʂ/, /ʐd͡ʐ/ /ʃt͡ʃ/, /ʒd͡ʒ/ R. ещё /jeˈɕːo/

B. яшчэ /jaˈʂt͡ʂe/ U. ще /ʃt͡ʃe/ “yet”

soft dental stops /tʲ/, /dʲ/ /t͡sʲ/, /d͡zʲ/ /tʲ/, /dʲ/ R. де́сять /ˈdʲesʲitʲ/,
B. дзе́сяць /ˈd͡zʲesʲat͡sʲ/,
U. де́сять /ˈdesʲatʲ/
"ten"
Proto-Slavic *v /v, f/ /w/ /v/
/ʋ/

/u̯/ (at the end of a closed syllable)

R. о́стров /ˈostraf/,
B. во́страў /ˈvostrau̯/,
U. о́стрів /ˈostriu̯/
"island"
/f/ (in loanwords) /f/ /x~xv~xw~xu̯/ /f/
Prothetic /v~w~u̯/ no yes R. о́стров /ˈostraf/,
B. во́страў /ˈvostrau̯/,
U. о́стрів /ˈostriu̯/
"island"
Proto-Slavic *g /ɡ/ /ɣ/ /ɦ/ R. голова́ /ɡɐlɐˈva/,
B. галава́ /ɣalaˈva/,
U. голова́ /ɦɔlɔˈʋa/
"head"
Hardening of final soft labials no yes R. степь /sʲtʲepʲ/,

B. стэп /stɛp/, U. степ /stɛp/

"steppe"

Hardening of soft /rʲ/ no yes hardened at the end of a closed syllable and not hardened elsewere R. матерь (máter’)

B. Вікторыя (Viktoryja) U. кобзар (kobzár (nominative case) кобзаря (kobzar’á (genetive case)

Proto-Slavic *CrьC, ClьC,
CrъC, CrъC
/rʲe/, /lʲe/,
/ro/, /lo/
/rɨ/, /ro/, /lʲi/, /lɨ/ /rɪ/, /lɪ/,
/ro/, /lo/
Protoslavic. ‘*kry (singular accusative case. krьvь);

R. кровь (krov’), кровавый (krovávyj) B. кроў (kroŭ), крывавы (kryvávy) U. кров (krov), кривавий (kryvávyj) ”blood, bloody”

Proto-Slavic *-ъj-, -ьj- /oj/, /ej/ /ɨj/, /ij/ /ɪj/
Proto-Slavic adj. end. *-ьjь /ej/ /ij/, /ej/ /ej/ /ij/ /ɪj/, /ij/
Proto-Slavic adj. end. *-ъjь /oj/ /ɨj/, /oj/ /oj/ /ɨj/ /ɪj/
Loss of the vocative case no yes no
3 sg. & pl. pres. ind. /t/ /tʲ/ /t͡sʲ/ /tʲ/ R. ду́мают /ˈdumajut/,
B. ду́маюць /ˈdumajut͡sʲ/,
Uk. ду́мають /ˈdumajutʲ/
"(they) think"
Dropping out
of 3 sg. pres. ind. ending (in e-stems)
no yes R. скажет (skážet)

B. скажа (skáža) U. скаже (skáže) ”(he/she) will say”

3 sg. masc. past ind. /v~w~u̯/ /l/ /u̯/ R. ду́мал /ˈdumal/,
B. ду́маў /ˈdumau̯/,
U. ду́мав /ˈdumau̯/
"(he) thought"
2nd palatalization in oblique cases no yes R. руке́ /ruˈkʲe/,
B. руцэ́ /ruˈt͡se/,
U. руці́ /ruˈt͡sʲi/
"hand"
(locative or prepositional case)

Notes

  1. Except for the Polesian dialect of Brest
  2. Except for the Eastern Polesian dialect
  3. Consonants are hard before /e/
  4. Except for some dialects
  5. In some Ukrainian dialects C/o/C can be /y~y̯e~y̯i~u̯o/
  6. In some Ukrainian dialects PSl *ě can be /e̝~i̯ɛ/
  7. Also at the end of words (in Russian and Belarusian). In Belarusian (unlike Russian), the change is not present in stressed 2 and 3 sg. pres. ind. endings.
  8. Can be /s/ in South Russian
  9. ^ In some Northern Russian dialects, Proto-Slavic *c and *č have merged into one sound, variously pronounced as /t͡s, t͡sʲ, t͡ʂ, t͡ɕ/ depending on a dialect.
  10. Can be /ɕ/ in Southern Russian
  11. Can be /ɕt͡ɕ/, /ʂː/
  12. In Russian light affrication can occur: ,
  13. In some Northern Russian sub-dialects /v/ is not devoiced to /f/
  14. Except for восемь "eight" and some others
  15. ^ Only unstressed, Church Slavonic influence
  16. Stressed, unstressed is usually reduced to
  17. Stressed, unstressed is usually reduced to
  18. In colloquial Russian, new vocative has appeared from a pure stem: мам, пап, Маш, Вань etc.
  19. In the dialect of Vologda

History

Influence of Church Slavonic

After the conversion of the East Slavic region to Christianity the people used service books borrowed from Bulgaria, which were written in Old Church Slavonic (a South Slavic language). The Church Slavonic language was strictly used only in text, while the colloquial language of the Bulgarians was communicated in its spoken form.

Throughout the Middle Ages (and in some way up to the present day) there existed a duality between the Church Slavonic language used as some kind of 'higher' register (not only) in religious texts and the popular tongue used as a 'lower' register for secular texts. It has been suggested to describe this situation as diglossia, although there do exist mixed texts where it is sometimes very hard to determine why a given author used a popular or a Church Slavonic form in a given context. Church Slavonic was a major factor in the evolution of modern Russian, where there still exists a "high stratum" of words that were imported from this language.

See also

References

  1. "Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации". publication.pravo.gov.ru. Archived from the original on February 5, 2022. Retrieved 2018-11-04.
  2. Sussex & Cubberley 2006, pp. 79–89.
  3. Pugh 2009, p. 7.
  4. Moser 2016, p. 124-139.
  5. "Dulichenko, Aleksandr The language of Carpathian Rus': Genetic Aspects" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-25. Retrieved 2009-12-12.
  6. Comrie, Bernard; Corbett, Greville G. (1 September 2003). The Slavonic Languages. Taylor & Francis. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-203-21320-9. Archived from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2017. ...following Vuk's reform of Cyrillic in the early nineteenth century, Ljudevit Gaj in the 1830s performed the same operation on Latinica, using the Czech system and producing a one-to-one symbol correlation between Cyrillic and Latinica as applied to the Serbian and Croatian parallel systems
  7. Moser, Michael A. (2018). "The Fate of the Ruthenian or Little Russian (Ukrainian) Language in Austrian Galicia (1772–1867)". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. 35 (2017–2018) (1/4): 124–139. JSTOR 44983536. Archived from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  8. "Указ об учреждении губерний и о росписании к ним городов". constitution.garant.ru. Retrieved 2024-01-15.
  9. "Turkic words in Russian". Languages Of The World. 2011-02-14. Retrieved 2024-01-15.
  10. "Database of False Friends in Slavic Languages". Danish Portal for East European Studies. Retrieved 2024-01-16.
  11. "Фонетика й вимова - Олександр Пономарів". ponomariv-kultura-slova.wikidot.com. Retrieved 2022-11-11.
  12. Sussex & Cubberley 2006, pp. 63–65.
  13. Sussex & Cubberley 2006, pp. 477–478.

Sources

Further reading

  • Comrie, Bernard; Corbett, Greville G, eds. (1993). "East Slavonic languages". The Slavonic languages. London, New York: Routledge. pp. 827–1036. ISBN 0-415-04755-2.

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