Most of the languages of the world are not Slavic, including:
English
Hebrew
Arabic
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Latin
Greek
Navajo
Hawaiian
Swahili
Spanish
German
French
Irish
Manx
Cornish
Welsh
Scottish Gaelic
Scots
Uster Scots
British Sign Language
Portuguese
Occitan
Catalan
Basque
Danish
Swedish
Norwegian
Icelandic
Faroese
Sami
Finnish
Dutch
Luxembourgish
Romansch
Romanian
Hungarian
Romani
Greenlandic
Haitian Creole
Chamorro
Tagalog
Yes, Lithuanian is the the Balto-Slavic language family.
Serbo-Croatian belongs to the South Slavic branch of the Slavic language family.
Russian is the most widely spoken Slavic language. It is also the Slavic language with the largest number of native speakers.
The most spoken Slavic language is Russia. Russian minorities in other Slavic states maintain their language too.
Yes, Russian is a Slavic language. Slavic languages share common roots and belong to the same language family, which includes languages such as Polish, Czech, and Ukrainian.
1. Indo-European 2. Balto-Slavic 3. Slavic 4. East Slavic 5. Russian This is the most accurate time-line of the Russian language that I know of.. I hope this is what you were looking for~! :D
SlavicThe 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
Flemish is not a slavic language.
Russian is part of the Slavic language branch.
The Polish language family tree looks like this: * Indo-European languages * Balto-Slavic languages * Slavic languages * West Slavic languages * Lechitic languages * Polish language
The phrase nismo komsije is from the Slavic language Croatian. It translates in the English language to "we are not neighbors".
No, Flemish is not a Slavic language. Flemish is a dialect of Dutch spoken in Belgium, particularly in the region of Flanders. Slavic languages include Russian, Polish, Czech, and others spoken in Eastern Europe.