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They, more than any other part of speech, have preserved the proto-Slavic case system.
The first volume was published in 1788 and describes the proto-Slavic era.
It is supposed that all syllables were open in the Proto-Slavic language.
Gimbutas goes so far as identifying it as the proto-Slavic homeland.
The word derives from the proto-Slavic nora 'pit, hole, abyss'.
It was during this period that his studies in the Proto-Slavic and Celtic languages began.
Alternatively, the name may be derived from a Proto-Slavic word for "family member", compare 'serbs'.
The Czech language developed from the Proto-Slavic language at the close of the 1st millennium.
A postulated proto-Slavic word for "bear", cognate with arctos and ursus.
For some others, the Common Slavic period comes after Proto-Slavic rather than including it.
The Proto-Slavic vowel jat has changed over time, coming to be pronounced differently in different areas.
The latter ethnonym can be originated from a reconstructed Proto-Slavic world for "multitute".
The Proto-Slavic language existed until around AD 500.
This leads some scholars to believe there was a proto-Slavic divinity or demon called Baba, associated with bad weather.
These are very strong indications that Perun was indeed the supreme god of the original Proto-Slavic pantheon.
During the late Proto-Slavic period, a pattern emerged in these vowels which characterised a yer as either "strong" or "weak".
Dual grammatical number was a feature of the Proto-Slavic language which has been retained by Slovene.
The language was a descendant of the Proto-Slavic language and faithfully retained many of its features.
In its early stages, the language of Carantanian Slavs was essentially Proto-Slavic.
Others, instead have labelled the neighbouring Milogradi or Lusatian cultures as proto-Slavic.
The name is derived from the ancient Proto-Slavic word pir, meaning "banquet" or "festivity".
It developed from the Proto-Slavic language in the 10th century and is mutually intelligible with the Slovak language.
However, the name is very ancient, indicating that Svarog was a deity of the Proto-Slavic pantheon.
The long Ijekavian reflex of Proto-Slavic jat is of disputed status.
The Proto-Slavic supine was used after verbs of motion, but it was replaced by the infinitive.