Iazychie
Iazychie ( _uk. Язичіє, "Yazychiye") was an artificial language invented in nineteenth century by Ukrainian Russophiles to provide support for the theory that Ukrainian was a dialect of Russian. Iazychie was used in their publications in East Galicia until twentieth century, when it was replaced with Russian. The language was an artificial mixture of Russian and Church Slavonic with Ukrainian pronunciation and regionalisms.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Bulgarian language — Not to be confused with Bulgar language. Bulgarian Български език Bălgarski ezik Spoken in Bulgaria, Turkey, Serbia, Greece, Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Albania, Kosovo, Repub … Wikipedia
Czech language — Czech Čeština, Český jazyk Spoken in Czech Republic Serbia Region Central Europe Native speakers 12 million … Wikipedia
Macedonian language — This article is about the modern Slavic language. For the extinct Paleo Balkan language, see Ancient Macedonian language. For other uses, see Macedonian (disambiguation). Macedonian Македонски јазик Makedonski jazik Pronunciation … Wikipedia
Polish language — Polski redirects here. For the car brand, see Polski Fiat. Polish język polski Pronunciation [ˈpɔlski] Spoken in … Wikipedia
Russian language — Russian русский язык (russkiy yazyk) Pronunciation [ˈrusʲkʲɪj jɪˈzɨk] Spoken in Russia, countries of the fo … Wikipedia
Old Church Slavonic — словѣньскъ ѩзꙑкъ slověnĭskŭ językŭ Spoken in formerly in Slavic areas, under the influence of Byzantium (both Catholic and Orthodox) Region Eastern Europe Era … Wikipedia
Serbian language — Serbian српски srpski Pronunciation [sr̩̂pskiː] Spoken in See below under Official status in Central and in immigrant communities in Western Eur … Wikipedia
Croatian language — Hrvatski redirects here. For other uses, see Hrvatski (disambiguation). Croatian hrvatski Pronunciation … Wikipedia
Russenorsk — (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈrʉsəˌnɔʂk]; Russian: Руссенорск, [rʊsʲɪˈnorsk]; Russo Norwegian) was a dual source pidgin language in the Arctic combining elements of Russian and Norwegian, created by Russian traders and Norwegian fishermen from … Wikipedia
Lower Sorbian language — Lower Sorbian Dolnoserbski, Dolnoserbšćina Pronunciation [ˈdɔlnɔˌsɛrskʲi] Spoken in Germany Region Brandenburg … Wikipedia