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Definition of Slavic people
1. Noun. A race of people speaking a Slavonic language.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Slavic People
Literary usage of Slavic people
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Who are the Slavs?: A Contribution to Race Psychology by Paul Rankov Radosavljevich (1919)
"... OF THE slavic people The Russian Epic T NTELLECTUAL originality of Slavic
common people is .•. shown by their poetical paleontology, ..."
2. The New American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by George Ripley (1859)
"... and containing a dark brown image of the Virgin, the miraculous power of which
is a matter of general belief among the slavic people. ..."
3. War, Peace, and the Future: A Consideration of Nationalism and by Ellen Karolina Sofia Key (1916)
"When the slavic people at last possesses freedom coupled with ... The soul of
the slavic people has enriched humanity with extraordinary gifts, ..."
4. War, Peace, and the Future: A Consideration of Nationalism and by Ellen Karolina Sofia Key (1916)
"When the slavic people at last possesses freedom coupled with ... The soul of
the slavic people has enriched humanity with extraordinary gifts, ..."
5. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1920)
"... a slavic people formerly living on the Elbe, have been extinct since the middle
of the 18th century. The early history of the Slays is veiled in ..."
6. The Methodist Review (1871)
"It was to this Bulgarian branch of the slavic people that the honor was given of
taking the initiative in literature, and in the dissemination of ..."
7. A History of Modern Europe by Merrick Whitcomb (1903)
"Their nearest kinsmen are the Poles, also a slavic people, on the east. 3.
The Poles.—Galicia, on the northeast, is the part of Poland that fell to the ..."