slav

listen to the pronunciation of slav
English - Turkish
(isim) Slav
{i} İslav
{i} Slav
(sıfat) Slav
Turkish - Turkish
Rus, Leh, Sırp, Hırvat, Bulgar ve çek halklarına dillerindeki yakınlık nedeniyle verilen ortak ad
Rus, Beyaz Rus, Ukraynalı, Leh, Sırp, Hırvat, Sloven, Bulgar, Slovak ve Çek halklarına dillerindeki yakınlık dolayısıyla verilen ortak ad
Slav halklarına özgü olan
Slavlar
Slav dilleri alanında yaşayan etnik grup
English - English
Shortened term for the Slavonian grebe
A member of a group of peoples in Eastern Europe speaking a Slavic language
A person of Slavic origins
A Slav is a member of any of the peoples of Eastern Europe who speak a Slavonic language. Slavic. someone who belongs to any of the races of Eastern and Central Europe who speak Slavic languages such as Russian, Bulgarian, Polish etc. Any member of the most numerous ethnic and linguistic body of peoples in Europe. They live chiefly in eastern and southeastern Europe but also extend across northern Asia to the Pacific. Slavs are customarily subdivided into eastern Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians), western Slavs (Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, and Wends, or Sorbs), and southern Slavs (Serbs, Croats, Bulgarians, Slovenes, and Macedonians). Historically, western Slavs were integrated into western Europe; their societies developed along the lines of other western European nations. Eastern and southern Slavs suffered Mongol and Turkish invasions and evolved more autocratic, state-centred forms of government. Religion (mainly Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism) divides Slavs, as does the use of the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. In the Middle Ages, Slavic polities that left a rich cultural heritage developed in Bohemia, Poland, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, and Bulgaria, but, by the end of the 18th century, all these states had been absorbed by powerful neighbours (the Ottoman Empire, Austria, Hungary, Prussia, Russia). Eastern Slavic history often was marked by unsuccessful attempts to repel Asian invaders. In the 16th century, Muscovy (later Russia) embarked on a course of expansion across northern and central Asia that eventually made it the most powerful Slavic state. Pan-Slavism in the 19th century had some influence on the formation of the new Slavic states after World War I, though Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia the two attempts to integrate different Slavic peoples into single polities had both disintegrated by the end of the 20th century, one peacefully and the other violently
{s} of or pertaining to Slavs, Slavic
{i} member of the Slavic race, member of a large people group of eastern and central Europe (includes Russians, Bulgarians, Slovenes, Poles, etc.)
One of a race of people occupying a large part of Eastern and Northern Europe, including the Russians, Bulgarians, Roumanians, Servo-Croats, Slovenes, Poles, Czechs, Wends or Sorbs, Slovaks, etc
any member of the people of eastern Europe or Asian Russia who speak a Slavonic language speaking a Slavic language; "the Slav population of Georgia
any member of the people of eastern Europe or Asian Russia who speak a Slavonic language
speaking a Slavic language; "the Slav population of Georgia"
Balto-Slav
An ethnolinguistic designation denoting a speaker of Balto-Slavic language or dialects

AGNI (Fire) was one of the great original deities of the Rigveda, just as fire was a principal divinity of other Indo-European peoples — Iranians, Greeks, Latins and Balto-Slavs.

East Slav
A member of the East Slavic peoples, including the Belarusians, Russians, Rusyns, and Ukrainians
Slavs
plural of Slav
Turkish - English
(a) Slav
Slavic, pertaining to the Slavs or their languages
Slav
slavic

Such languages as Russian, Polish, Czech and Bulgarian have common Slavic roots. - Rusça, Lehçe, Çekçe ve Bulgarca gibi dillerin ortak Slav kökenleri vardır.

Such languages as Russian, Polish, Czech and Bulgarian have common Slavic roots. - Rusya, Polonya, Çek ve Bulgaristan'ın ortak Slav kökleri var.

slavic people
slav dili
Slavic
slav

    Hyphenation

    Slav

    Turkish pronunciation

    släv

    Pronunciation

    /ˈsläv/ /ˈslɑːv/

    Etymology

    [ 'släv, 'slav ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English sclave, from Medieval Latin sclavus, from Byzantine Greek Σκλάβος (Sklábos), from earlier Σλάβήνος (Sklabēnos), from plural Σλάβήνοι (Sklabēnoi), from Proto-Slavic *slověninŭ (compare Old Church Slavonic словѣне (Slověne) 'Thessalonian Slavs', Old Russian Словене (Slověně) 'Slavs near Novgorod', Slovutich 'Dniepr river', Serbian Slavonica 'river name'), from слово (slovo) 'word, speech', from Proto-Indo-European *kléu̯es 'fame'. More at loud.

    Tenses

    slaving, slaved
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