Definitions for Slavic

Slavic Slav·ic

Spelling: [slah-vik, slav-ik]
IPA: /ˈslɑ vɪk, ˈslæv ɪk/

Slavic is a 6 letter English word.

You can make 130 anagrams from letters in Slavic (acilsv).

Definitions for Slavic

noun

  1. a branch of the Indo-European family of languages, usually divided into East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Byelorussian), West Slavic (Polish, Czech, Slovak, Sorbian), and South Slavic (Old Church Slavonic, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovene).

adjective

  1. of or relating to the Slavs or their languages.

Origin of Slavic

First recorded in 1805-15; Slav + -ic

Examples for Slavic

There must have been a strain of Slavic in the old man, he loved Chopin and Tschaïkowsky so.

This sense of betrayal, Globa says, renders Ukrainians much less susceptible to Russian appeals to Slavic Orthodox unity.

It means “very tasty;” and it simply never is—that is, not to those unaccustomed to the flavors of the Slavic palate.

Even the words vodka and whiskey are derived from the same word: “water” in Slavic and Gaelic, respectively.

In race the Rumanians are of Latin blood with some admixture of Slavic.

A true Russian patriot and Slavic brother would see the world differently.

For the most part they were children, 21 Slavic, Semitic, Italian.

But the aggregate is only 233, while the aggregate of Slavic seats is 259.

The Slavic twist to the name amused Flynt, who seized upon it.

KIEV—They are burly, muscular men, reminiscent of the Soviet era with their strong Slavic features and unsmiling demeanor.

Word Value for Slavic
Scrable

0

Words with friends

0

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