Slavic people speak Slavic languages. Some of the most common are:
Russian
Polish
Czech
Slovak
Bulgarian
Ukrainian
Belarussian
Rusyn
Slovenian
Bosnian
Croatian
Montenegrin
Macedonian
Church Slavonic
Furthermore, some Slavic people speak non-Slavic languages as well, particularly:
English
German
Romanian
Hungarian
French
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The Polish language family tree looks like this:
* Indo-European languages * Balto-Slavic languages
* Slavic languages
* West Slavic languages
* Lechitic languages
* Polish language
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Slavic The Russian language belongs to the East Slavic family of languages. Its brother languages are Ukrainian, Belarusian and Rusyn. The East Slavic is part of the Slavic languages.
It goes like this.
- Indo European
- Proto Slavic
- Slavic
- East Slavic
- Russian
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a branch of the Indo-European family of languages, usually
divided into East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Byelorussian), West
Slavic (Polish, Czech, Slovak, Sorbian), and South Slavic (Old
Church Slavonic, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Serbo-Croatian,
Slovene).
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They are both Slavic languages, having developed from
Proto-Slavic and Proto-Balto-Slavic. They are cousin languages, and
are part of groups that include many other languages from the same
area.