References ↑ Nationalencyklopedin "Världens 100 största språk 2007" The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007 ↑ У Падляшскім ваяводстве беларуская мова прызнана афіцыйнай ↑ European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages Slavic languagesHistory Proto-Balto-Slavic Up to Proto-Slavic Proto-Slavic (Accent) Old Church Slavonic Modern languages Cyril and Methodius Cyrillic script Glagolitic script East Slavic Belarusian Old East Slavic Old Novgorodian Russian dialects Ruthenian Ukrainian Canadian Ukrainian South SlavicEastern Bulgarian Macedonian Transitional Torlakian Western Serbo-Croatian Bosnian Croatian Montenegrin Serbian Slovene West SlavicCzech–Slovak Czech Knaanic Moravian Slovak Eastern Slovak Lechitic Polabian Polish dialects Old Polish Middle Polish Pomeranian Kashubian Slovincian Sorbian Upper Sorbian Lower Sorbian MicrolanguagesEast Slavic (Carpathian) Rusyn Lemko Pannonian Rusyn Podlachian West Polesian South Slavic Banat Bulgarian Bunjevac Burgenland Croatian Chakavian Kajkavian Molise Croatian Pomak Prekmurje Slovene Resian Slavic dialects of Greece West Slavic Podhale Lach Silesian Cieszyn Silesian Mixed languages Balachka Kyakhta Russian–Chinese Pidgin Russenorsk Surzhyk Trasianka Constructedlanguages Church Slavonic Pan-Slavic language Interslavic Slavonic-Serbian Iazychie Army Slavic Historicalphonology Slavic first palatalization Slavic second palatalization Slavic liquid metathesis and pleophony Monophthongization Dybo's law Havlík's law Hirt's law Illič-Svityč's law Ivšić's law Meillet's law Pedersen's law Ruki sound law Van Wijk's law Winter's law Languages in italics are extinct. Authority control databases NationalGermanyUnited StatesFranceBnF dataJapanCzech RepublicSwedenIsraelOtherYale LUX