Something that is Slavic belongs or relates to Slavs.
...Americans of Slavic descent.
...Slavic culture.
...his high Slavic cheekbones.
Slavic in British English
(ˈslɑːvɪk)
noun, adjective
another word (esp US) for Slavonic
Slavic in American English
(ˈslɑvɪk; ˈslævɪk)
noun
a principal branch of the Indo-European family of languages, generally divided into East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian), South Slavic (Old Church Slavonic, Bulgarian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian, Macedonian), and West Slavic (Polish, Lusatian, Czech, Slovak)
Examples of 'Slavic' in a sentence
Slavic
He was only twenty-eight, a product of the policy of Nativization, assimilation into Slavic culture.
Shah, Idries KARA KUSH
Indeed, he still had a high opinion of Slavic chivalry, based on a visit some years before to Leningrad.
Shah, Idries KARA KUSH
He was a short, heavyset man of about forty, with dark rumpled hair and emphatic Slavic features.
All related terms of 'Slavic'
Slavonic
Something that is Slavonic relates to East European languages such as Russian, Czech, and Serbo-Croat , or to the people who speak them.
Old Slavic
→ Old Church Slavonic
Balto-Slavic
the Baltic and Slavic languages, when considered as constituting a subfamily within the Indo-European family of languages: the Baltic and Slavic branches are now generally considered by scholars as independently derived from Indo-European
Church Slavonic
Old Church Slavonic , esp as preserved in the liturgical use of the Orthodox church
Old Church Slavonic
the oldest recorded Slavonic language: the form of Old Slavonic into which the Bible was translated in the ninth century, preserved as a liturgical language of various Orthodox Churches: belonging to the South Slavonic sub-branch of languages
non-
Non- is used in front of adjectives and nouns to form adjectives that describe something as not having a particular quality or feature .
pan
A pan is a round metal container with a long handle , which is used for cooking things in, usually on top of a cooker or stove .
Pan-Slavism
(esp in the 19th century) the movement for the union of the Slavic peoples, esp under the hegemony of tsarist Russia