The Balto-Slavic language family.
In central Asia, the largest language group is Russian. It is spoken by six million people. The rest of the common languages come from a Turkic language group.
They are a tribe.
An ethnic group is a group of people whose members identify with each other through a common heritage, consisting of a common culture, including a shared language or dialect.
A group of communistic countries, under the rule of the Soviet Union, that were located in Europe and blocked the Soviet Union from European attacks.
Polish, Russian and Czech are all examples of the Slavic language group, which is a subgroup of Indo-European languages. The Slavic languages are the most widely spoken language subgroups in Europe, with 315 million people speaking some form of it.
The language group "Altaic" refers to spoken languages from Eastern Europe through Asia Minor.
The most common language group in Northern Europe is the Germanic language group, which includes languages such as Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese. These languages are spoken by millions of people in countries like Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and parts of Finland.
Germanic languages (Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish) are the most common language group in Northern Europe, one of only two. The other is Uralic (Finnish and Sami).
Slavic
Eastern Hemisphere
The Afro-Asiatic group.
USSR .
Blood group A is the most common bloodtype in Europe.
An iron curtain.
The Turkic language group is most common.
There are hundreds of ethnic groups in Eastern Europe. The largest would have to be the Russians, the Ukrainians, the Romanians, the Greeks, and the Turks. Large immigrant ethnic groups would be such as Chinese, Afghani, Pakistani, and Indian.
Jews.