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Rosja albo Rosyjski Buszland chce stac sie slowacki - MANIPULOWANIE RODZINAMI LINGUISTYCZNYMI

Data: 2010-09-02 11:14:06
Autor: Me
Rosja albo Rosyjski Buszland chce stac sie slowacki - MANIPULOWANIE RODZINAMI LINGUISTYCZNYMI



( 2) Fraud :Manipulating Polish languge classification - WHAT IS
SLOVAC SINGLE LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGE FAMILY SIMULTANEUSLY, SLOVENIAN
SINGLE LANGUAGE;  AND WHAT IS CYRRILIC FAMILY OF LANGUAGES


RUSSIAN IS IN CYRRILIC FAMILY OF LANGUAGES NOT SLOVAC FAMILY

BELOW, SLAVIC ARE NOT SLAVONIC; LEVONIC LANGUAGE, NOW INTERPRETED THAT
IS LOTWIAN WAS POLISH IN THE REGION OF BALTIC STATES, WHERE THE
STATELES PEOPLE LIVE NOW.


The Slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages), a group of
closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-
European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern Europe, in much
of the Balkans, in parts of Central Europe, and in the northern
part of Asia.

NORTH ASIA - THAT IS REAL NEWS - THE MANIPULATION COMES FROM THE FACT
THAT RUSSIAN ASSIAN PART WANTS TO SUFDDENLY BE SLAVIC. RUSSIA IS AN
ARTIFICIAL CONGLOMERAT OF CULTURE, LENGUAGES AND CONTINENTS, MADE BY
FORCE AND NOT PROGRESSIVE DEVELOPMENT.

Contents [hide]
1 Branches
2 History
2.1 Common roots and ancestry
2.2 Evolution
2.3 Differentiation
3 Common features
3.1 Selected cognates
4 Influence on neighboring languages
5 Detailed list with ISO 639 codes
6 See also
7 Notes
8 References
9 External links


Branches
Scholars traditionally divide Slavic languages on the basis of
geographical distribution into three main branches, some of which
feature subbranches:

East Slavic, extant: Russian, Ukrainian, Rusyn (a language or a
dialect of Ukrainian), and Belarusian

LIE - POLISH LANGUAGE DOMINATED AND STILL IS IN DEMAND IN ALL THESE
AREAS.

WHERE IS CENTRAL EUROPEAN LANGUAGE - THAT SI POISH AND EXCLUSIVELY
POLISH

West Slavic, which further subdivides into:
Czech and Slovak

LIE - THAT IS SOUTH NOT WEST - IT IS CONSISTENT WITH DISCOVERED
MANIPULATION NR 1 TO DILUTE POLISH LANGUAGE INTO SLOVAC LANGUAGE
( SEPARATE FROM SLOVAC FAMILY)

Upper and Lower Sorbian (minority languages in Germany)
AHA!

Lechitic languages: Polish, Pomeranian/Kashubian, Silesian, and the
extinct Polabian
South Slavic, which further subdivides into:
KASHUBIAN IS HYBRID ONLY AND IS NOT THAT SLAVIC

Western subgroup composed of Slovene and Serbo-Croatian (Croatian,
Bosnian, Serbian, Montenegrin).
SLOVENIAN AND SLOVAKIAN ARE 2 DIFFERENT LANGUAGES FOR 2 DIFFERENT
COUNTRIES FAR APART TOO; BUT FOR THE AMERICAN THE MIX IS EASY TO ADOPT
( FOR NO FAULT OF AMERICAN - THE MANIPULATERS WORKED THAT VERY HARD)

Eastern subgroup composed of Bulgarian and Macedonian
MACEDONIA ? REALLY? THAT IS IRAN

The oldest Slavic literary language was Old Church Slavonic, of which
Church Slavonic is a later descendant

IT COULD BE; CAN WE REALY CHECK THAT. IS THAT THE LANGUAGE OF THE
FIRST MILLENIUM ( 0 - 1000) IN  CURRENT POLAND AND BEYOND, AS POLISH
'TRIBES' WERE
WIDE SPREAD, CONNECTED BY THE LANGUAGE; AND AS HERE AND THERE
REFERENCED ROMAN CATOLIC INFLUENCES; NOW , BRITISH FACTOR WANTS
PROTESTNTS THERE - NO CHANCE IN HELL.

Slavic languages by the number of speakers (as of 1997).[1]Some
linguists speculate that a North Slavic branch has existed as well.
The Old Novgorod dialect may have reflected some idiosyncrasies of
this group.

REALLY? OR WAS IT INFLUENCED BY POLISH AS IS ONE LANGUAGE. POLISH DOES
NOT HAVE DIALECTS - TEHSE ARE COLLOQUALS, FOREIGNERS MIGHT MISPERCEIVE
THAT.

On the other hand, the term "North Slavic" is also used sometimes to
combine the West and East Slavic languages into one group, in
opposition to the South Slavic languages, due to traits the West and
East Slavic branches share with each other that they do not with the
South Slavic languages.

THEY APPARENTLY WANNA THAT TO BE RUSSIAN AS SLOVAC LANGUAGE. HAS IT
EVER BEEN?. I WAS TOUGHT THAT RUSSIAN BASES IN CYRILICA I CYRILLIC
LANGUAGE.

The most obvious differences between the West and East Slavic branches
are in orthography of standard languages; West Slavic languages are
written in the Latin alphabet, and have had more Western European
influence due to their speakers being historically Roman Catholic,
whereas the East Slavic languages are written in the Cyrillic alphabet
and with Eastern Orthodox or Uniate faithful, have had more Greek
influence.

East Slavic languages such as Russian have, however, during and after
Peter the Great's Europeanization campaign, absorbed many
international words of Latin, French, German, and Italian origin,
somewhat reducing this difference in influence.

The tripartite division of the Slavic languages does not take into
account the spoken dialects of each language.
THAT 'PARTATE' IS ARTIFICIAL ONLY. LANGUAGE TENDS TO KEEP TO ITSELF
NOT THE OTHER WAY.

 Of these, certain so-called transitional dialects and hybrid dialects
often bridge the gaps between different languages, showing
similarities that do not stand out when comparing Slavic literary
(i.e., standard) languages. For example, Slovak (West Slavic) and
Ukrainian (East Slavic) are bridged by eastern Slovak dialects,
LIE!
Rusyn[citation needed], and western Ukrainian dialects.
UKRAINIAN IS ONE LANGUAGE

Polish has similar transitionality with both western Ukrainian and
Belarusian dialects
WE HAVE NO BIALORUSIAN OR RUSSIAN OIN POLISH AT ALL.

....
  CYRILLIC LANGUAGES DEFINITION BY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, RUSSIAN
DIVISION

Cyrillic language alphabets and how they diverge from one another
The following letters in the Cyrillic alphabet diverge from those in
Russian, as found in the Library of Congress Russian transliteration
table. This chart includes letters from Bulgarian, Macedonian,
Serbian, Russian (cursive), and Ukranian that are unique to that
language. The chart serves to help identify the language of
publications in the Cyrillic alphabet.

This information was compiled from: Cyrillic Alphabets by Karel Piska,
transliteration tables from the Princeton University Slavic Cataloging
Manual, and A manual of European languages for librarians, by C.G.
Allen.

See also
CPSO's Identification of Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian, which says
that "works in the Cyrillic alphabet are probably Serbian. Works in
the roman alphabet may be Serbian, Croatian, or Bosnian."
information from Wikipedia on Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian,
Russian, Serbian, and Ukrainian.
Bulgarian

Upper case Lower case Transliterates as
  Sht, sht
  ,
Macedonian

Upper case Lower case Transliterates as
  ,
Note: Macedonian uses the Serbian form of the Cyrillic alphabet, but
uses:
°  and  after  and T instead of  and
° s (dz) after
Upper case Lower case Transliterates as
  ,
S s Dz, dz
J j J, j
  ,
  Lj, lj
  Nj, n j
  C, c [transliterates as ,  in Russian]
  ,
Serbian

Upper case Lower case Transliterates as
  ,
J j J, j
  Lj, lj
  Nj, n j
  ,
Russian (cursive)

Upper case Lower case Transliterates as
Ë ë Ë, ë
Ukranian

  H, h [transliterates as G, g in Russian]
  G, g
  ,
  ,  [transliterates Zh, zh in Russian]
  Y, y [transliterates as I, i in Russian]
I i I, i [transliterates as ,  in Russian]
Ď ď Ď, ď

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Comments to Mickey Koth, Yale University Music Library
©Yale University Library Last revised August 15, 2007.

Rosja albo Rosyjski Buszland chce stac sie slowacki - MANIPULOWANIE RODZINAMI LINGUISTYCZNYMI

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