A branch of the Indo-European language family that consists of the Baltic and Slavic languages.
BaltoSlavic Bal'to-Sla'vic adj.
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A branch of the Indo-European language family that consists of the Baltic and Slavic languages.
BaltoSlavic Bal'to-Sla'vic adj.The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a family of Indo-European languages including the Slavic and Baltic languages
Synonyms: Balto-Slavic language, Balto-Slavonic
The hypothetical Balto-Slavic language group consists of the Baltic and Slavic language subgroups of the Indo-European family. The grouping is due to a reconstructed Proto-Balto-Slavic dialect continuum or just common langue traits accuaired by close contact of speakers of ancestral langues.
There is some debate as to the nature of the reconstruction among linguists. Opinons range from an actual genetic unity to a more incidential "period of common language and life" with the strong similarities due to prolongued language contact or even total original separation.
| Balto-Slavic | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: |
Eastern and Northern Europe |
| Genetic classification: |
Indo-European Balto-Slavic |
| Subdivisions: |
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| Hypothetical Indo-European phylogenetic units |
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|---|---|
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Balto-Slavic |
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Baltic and Slavic share some more close similarities, phonological, lexical, and morphosyntactic, than any other language groups within the Indo-European language family save the close affinities between Indic and Iranian languages. Some linguists, following the lead of such notable Indo-Europeanists as August Schleicher (1861), and Oswald Szemerényi (1957), take these to indicate that the two groups separated from a common ancestor, the Proto-Balto-Slavic language, only well after the breakup of Indo-European.
Other linguists — themselves following such notable Indo-Europeanists as Antoine Meillet (1905, 1908, 1922, 1925, 1934) — regard these similarities as arising entirely from intensive contact between the two branches well after they had separately split directly from Proto-Indo-European (the satem group).
The former view is traditionally the more widely held of the two: Beekes (1995: 22), for example, states expressly that "[t]he Baltic and Slavic languages were originally one language and so form one group". Collinge (1985) includes an appendix (p 271–77) on "Laws of accentuation in Balto-Slavic", apparently implying a belief in a single Balto-Slavic proto-language, but concedes that "everything in this section is controversial, including this sentence". Gray and Atkinson's (2003) application of language-tree divergence analysis supports a genetic relationship between the Baltic and Slavic languages and dating the split of the family to about 1400 BCE. That this was found using a very different methodology than other studies lends some credence to the links between the two.[1].
More than 100 words are common in their form and meaning to Baltic and Slavic alone, among them:
The amount of shared words may be explained either by existence of common Balto-Slavic language in the past or by the following circumstances:
Until Meillet's Dialectes indo-européens of 1908, Balto-Slavic unity was undisputed among linguists -- as he notes himself at the beginning of the Le Balto-Slave chapter, "L'unité linguistique balto-slave est l'une de celles que personne ne conteste" ("Balto-Slavic linguistic unity is one of those that no one contests"). Meillet's critique of Balto-Slavic confined itself to the seven characteristics listed by Karl Brugmann in 1903, attempting to show that no single one of these is sufficient to prove genetic unity.
Szemerényi in his 1957 re-examination of Meillet's results concludes that the Balts and Slavs did, in fact, share a "period of common language and life", and were probably separated due to the incursion of Germanic tribes along the Vistula and the Dnepr roughly at the beginning of the Common Era. Szemerényi notes fourteen points that he judges cannot be ascribed to chance or parallel innovation, and thus considers proof of Balto-Slavic unity:
Another common innovation proposed for Balto-Slavic is Winter's law (Werner Winter, 1978), the lengthening of a short vowel before a voiced plosive. Conditions of the operation of the law are disputed; according to Matasović (1995) the change only takes place in closed syllables.
Klimas' Baltic and Slavic Revisited lists some points adduced by linguists skeptical of a Balto-Slavic proto-language.
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