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Definition of Balto-Slavic
1. Noun. A family of Indo-European languages including the Slavic and Baltic languages.
Generic synonyms: Indo-european, Indo-european Language, Indo-hittite
Specialized synonyms: Slavic, Slavic Language, Slavonic, Slavonic Language, Baltic, Baltic Language
Definition of Balto-Slavic
1. Adjective. Of or pertaining to Proto-Balto-Slavic language, people who spoke it and their culture. ¹
2. Proper noun. Proto-Balto-Slavic language, i.e. a common development stage between the Proto-Indo-European and the later Baltic and Slavic languages. ¹
3. Proper noun. A speaker of Proto-Balto-Slavic. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Balto-Slavic
Literary usage of Balto-Slavic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Mythology of All Races by Louis Herbert Gray, George Foot Moore, John Arnott MacCulloch (1918)
""Chastity (Teutonic and Balto-Slavic)," iii. 499-503. "Crimes and Punishments (Teutonic
and Slavic)," iv. 300-05. "Death and Disposal of the Dead (Slavic)," ..."
2. Elements of the History of the English Language by Uno Lorenz Lindelöf (1911)
"The Balto-Slavic group is divided, as the name signifies, into two chief divisions.
The Baltic languages include Old Prussian, which died out in the 17th ..."
3. The Development of Language: An Elementary Study of Language History and of by Harry Fletcher Scott, Wilbert Lester Carr (1921)
"The most important of the Balto-Slavic languages, from the point of view of the
numbers speaking it, is Russian. The old Russian empire included part of ..."
4. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 93 by Harvard University (1897)
"Only in the cases of the Italic and the Balto-Slavic branches does he fail to
... That exactly the same kind of name was used in Balto-Slavic as well, ..."
5. The Dative of Agency: A Chapter of Indo-European Case-syntax by Alexander Green (1913)
"Leaving aside the new formations in Sanskrit and Greek and, of course, all analytic
substitutes such as in Germanic or Balto-Slavic,1 the passive verbal ..."