Template:Short description Template:Infobox language family
The West Slavic languages are a subdivision of the Slavic language group.<ref name="Winkler Prins">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> They include Polish, Czech, Slovak, Kashubian, Silesian, Upper Sorbian and Lower Sorbian.<ref name="Winkler Prins"/> The languages have traditionally been spoken across a mostly continuous region encompassing the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland,<ref name="Winkler Prins" /> the westernmost regions of Ukraine and Belarus, and a bit of eastern Lithuania.Template:Cn In addition, there are several language islands such as the Sorbian areas in Lusatia in Germany,<ref name="Winkler Prins"/> and Slovak areas in Hungary and elsewhere.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>
ClassificationEdit
West Slavic is usually divided into three subgroups—Czech–Slovak, Lechitic and Sorbian—based on similarity and degree of mutual intelligibility. The groupings are as follows:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology classifies the West Slavic languages within their Glottolog database as follows:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Some linguists include Upper and Lower Sorbian in the Lechitic branch, but other linguists regard it as a separate branch.Template:Sfn The reason for this is that 'the Sorbian dialects are extremely diverse, and there are virtually no linguistic features common to all Sorbian dialects which distinguish them as a group from the other Slavic languages' (Sussex & Cubberley 2006).Template:Sfn Czech and Slovak are more closely related to each other than to the other West Slavic languages, and also closer to each other than Polish and Sorbian are.Template:Sfn Czecho-Slovak (Slovak in particular) shares certain features with other Slavic languages, such as Slovene and BCMS.Template:Sfn
Distinctive featuresEdit
Some distinctive features of the West Slavic languages, as from when they split from the East Slavic and South Slavic branches around the 3rd to 6th centuries AD (alternatively, between the 6th and 10th centuriesTemplate:Sfn), are as follows:<ref>Zenon Klemensiewicz, Historia języka Polskiego, 7th edition, Wydawnictwo naukowe PWN, Warsaw 1999. Template:ISBN</ref>
- Development of Proto-Slavic *tj, *dj into palatalized ts, (d)z, as in modern Polish/Czech/Slovak {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("night"; compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (noch));
- Retention of the groups kv, gv as in Polish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("flower"); {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("star") (Compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (cvet); {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (zvezda));
- Retention of tl, dl, as in Polish/Slovak/Czech {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("ard"; compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}});
- Palatized x developed into š, as in Polish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (locative case of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "fly");
- The groups pj, bj, mj, vj developed into (soft) consonant forms without the epenthesis of l, as in Polish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("I shall buy"; compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}});
- A tendency towards fixed stress (on the first syllable in Czech and Slovak and on the penultimate syllable in Polish);
- Use of the endings -ego or -ého for the genitive singular of the adjectival declension;
- Extension of the accusative form *tъnъ to nominative in place of *tъ, leading to Slovak/Polish/Czech {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("this" (masc.); compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; Old Church Slavonic тъ);
- Extension of the genitive form *čьso to nominative and accusative in place of čь(to), leading to Polish/Czech {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("what", compare Russian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; OCS чьто, genitive чьсо).
Although influences from other language families have contributed a large number of loanwords, and to a lesser extent to verb morphology and syntax, the Slavic languages retained a distinctly Slavic character, with clear roots in Indo-European.Template:Sfn
The West Slavic languages are all written in the Latin script, while the East Slavic branch uses CyrillicTemplate:Sfn and the South Slavic branch is mixed.Template:Sfn<ref name="O.T. Ford">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
HistoryEdit
The early Slavic expansion reached Central Europe in c. the 7th century, and the West Slavic dialects diverged from Common Slavic over the following centuries. West Slavic polities of the 9th century include the Principality of Nitra and Great Moravia. The West Slavic tribes settled on the eastern fringes of the Carolingian Empire, along the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. The Obotrites were given territories by Charlemagne in exchange for their support in his war against the Saxons.Template:Citation needed
In the high medieval period, the West Slavic tribes were again pushed to the east by the incipient German {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, decisively so following the Wendish Crusade in the 11th century. The Sorbs and other Polabian Slavs like Obodrites and Veleti came under the domination of the Holy Roman Empire and were strongly Germanized.<ref>Christiansen, Erik (1997). The Northern Crusades. London: Penguin Books. p. 287. Template:ISBN.</ref>
The Bohemians established the Duchy of Bohemia in the 9th century, which was incorporated into the Holy Roman Empire in the early 11th century. At the end of the 12th century the duchy was raised to the status of kingdom, which was legally recognized in 1212 in the Golden Bull of Sicily. Lusatia, the homeland of the remaining Sorbs, became a crown land of Bohemia in the 11th century, and Silesia followed suit in 1335. The Slovaks, on the other hand, never became part of the Holy Roman Empire, being incorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary. Hungary fell under Habsburg rule alongside Austria and Bohemia in the 16th century, thus uniting the Bohemians, Moravians, Slovaks, and Silesians under a single ruler. While Lusatia was lost to Saxony in 1635 and most of Silesia was lost to Prussia in 1740, the remaining West Slavic Habsburg dominions remained part of the Austrian Empire and then Austria-Hungary, and after that remained united until 1992 in the form of Czechoslovakia.Template:Citation needed
Over the past century, there have been efforts by some to standardize and to recognize Silesian, Lachian, and Moravian as separate languages.Template:Citation needed
See alsoEdit
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