/slavic languages/

Their beauty equals our poverty.

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>Old Prussians

Something has to be done about that gap by Hungary and Romania.

what the fuck are celts doing there

We're not eastern balkans tatar, this is the west balkans.

celts basically dominated a huge amount of europe in prehistory

they were the original jews

actually we are

No we're not.

It's just a shit map that's rife with errors, just like most historical maps you can find on the internet. But I couldn't see that just by looking at the thumbnail. Must've been high when I saved it.

...

see

...

Some Slavs apparently managed to interact with the last remaining Celts, or at least their descendants:

>The name Carantania is of pre-Slavic origin.
>Paul the Deacon mentions Slavs in Carnuntum, which is erroneously called Carantanum (Carnuntum, quod corrupte vocitant Carantanum)
>Another possible etymology is that it may have been formed from a toponymic base carant- which ultimately derives from pre-Indo-European root *karra meaning 'rock', or that it is of Celtic origin and derived from *karantos meaning 'friend, ally'.
>Its Slovene name *korǫtanъ was adopted from the Latin *carantanum. The toponym Carinthia (Slovene: Koroška < Proto-Slavic
korǫt’ьsko) is also claimed to be etymologically related, deriving from pre-Slavic *carantia

>implying fyromian deserves its own box

there's still celts alive today m8
granted they're cucked by anglos but some of them still speak that celtic shit

Nah Celtic presence in SE Europe is well documented. Stfu

That's what I responded to initially. Serbo-Croatian, Slovene and us are western balkans. Tatars speak a Russian dialect we can't understand without studying.

>t. half-serbian internet warrior in Skopje

(You)

The name for Vienna in all languages comes from Celtic

The romans settled on the site of an ancient Celtic fortress and named it after it, which they called Vindobonna

Vindobonna has cognates with Welsh, and in Celtic is can be traced back to Gwyn Bon, which means white fortress

cтиcнaх cи хyя и ми ce нaдъpви

Yeah, but not in the timeframe that the map represents, and not even in the exact territorial extent if you look at it closely. It's an anachronistic mess that doesn't take into account the Germanic expansion eastwards, Romance expansion out of Italy, and Turkish migrations westwards in the given period.

>The name for Vienna in all languages comes from Celtic

Ah, good that you brought this up in a Slav thread. The Serbocroatian name for the city is Beč, which I believe comes from Hungarian. The Slovenian name is Dunaj, which likely comes from the river Danube (modern name: Donava). I wonder how many more names for Vienna there are.

oh no i've been proven wrong

still, it's interesting how much influence Celtic has on place names

Danube is Dunaj in Slovak.
We call Vienna Viedeň

>The first record of the name Belograd appeared on April, 16th, 878, in a Papal letter[41] to Bulgarian ruler Boris I. Later, this name appeared in several variants: Alba Graeca (Greek city), Griechisch Wiessenburg (Greek white castle), Nandor Alba (City of the Bulgarians), Nandor Fejervar (The white castle of the Bulgarians) - still named like this in the Hungarian transltation of the city, Castelbianco (White Castle), Alba Bulgarica (Bulgarian City)
LAMO

PSHSHZYSHY HSYDSYXSSHPSH PSHPSH?

Don't get me wrong, I didn't expect you to know the name of a foreign city in two obscure languages even further away. It is interesting though that us Slovenes who were a part of Austria for all its existence used a completely different name for our capital than the dominant ethnicity, isn't it?

#
Check out the Czech case endings.
Instrumental pl -ami/y
Dative plural - ům/ám
Dative singular masc - ovi/u
Locative plural ach/ech
Accusative pl = nom pl except for when nom pl - i and not y.
I don't know about the rest of the grammar but czech cases are the richest in quantity.

Even Serbs distinguish between Old Serbia and Serbia proper, so I don't think they'd care.

I'm not too surprised, considering I know nothing about Slovenian, but place and country names are exactly what are strangest

I find it really funny that the Welsh word for 'English' is Saesneg - which means Saxon, because the Welsh were the inhabitants of England before the Anglo-Saxons invaded in the 550 or so and it's still considered that way

was old serbia on the territory of bosnia and montenegro?

Old Serbia = White Serbia (I think)

fuck no

Instrumental plural -mi/i
Dative plural: -im/om/em/am
Dative singular masc.: -u
Locative plural: -ih/ah
Accusative plural = nom. pl. except for when nom. pl. ends in -i

VŠETKO MÁM PRED SEBOU, ČO BOLO JE ZA MNOU!
Love the čo and bolo stuff

Totally forgot this one masculine declension, where the instrumental plural and locative plural actually get -ovi and -ovih endings respectively.

Thats actually really interesting. Thats an old stem(?), which can be seen on g pl -ov/ów. G pl used to just cut the ending, meaning ov wasnt an ending

These threads are unironically the best thing on Sup Forums lately tbqh bratki
Which is odd, because I'd expect more cancer in summer, not less of it.
iktf
blame the eternal niemiec

Celtic tribes of Boii (that's their actual name, not even memeing) -> Bohemians -> Czechs

>it's interesting how much influence Celtic has on place names
It really is.
>Lublin, Poland
>Berlin, Germany
>Dublin, Ireland

The hem part of Bohemia was added by the Bavarians though.

Boii were fucking overpowered in Rome 2

>Germano-Celtic rape babies
Czechs confirmed for being English

You might be on to something here. South Slavic placenames do not usually end in -lin. I can only think of one Croatian town as an example.

'ere cometh dat Boii
o shite, conais ata tu?

Lin in Celtic means lake/pool, aka Dublin = black pool

>Slavic languages
More like yarak çük sik, hocam :DDDDDddd xdd

East Germanics who merely speak a Slavic language reporting

Berło means a scepter here, it may or may not be connected to Berlin

Pathetic.

t. a slave

postan haj kualiti slav mjuzik to make up for cringy g*rmanic baiting
youtube.com/watch?v=-yoooQvXnQY

Is it coincidence that big rivers have D and N sounds?
Dnepr
Donets
Desna
Dunaj
Don

Not sure if there's any connection here, but deszcz means rain in Polish

>Slavs
>Balkans
>thread open for almost 2h
>almost no insults and muh history
>some actually interesting points

what happened? heat wave? tiredness? vacations starting?

Drinaaaa :-DDDDD

2 0 1 6

Maybe it's connected to dno (the bottom). Probably not that either.

Why is Vienna, Beč?

It's simple
/slav/ = shitflinging and sperging out
/slav languages/ = comfy discussions and high quality menes

Tbqh tree division doesn't make any sense, since many of langs from different subgroups constantly influence each other (for example Polish and Belarusian)
also
>Lekhitic
>not Lechitic
also where are other Polabian langs, there was a shitton of them.

same
but with Wiedeń, so the same thing written differently

nigger check the etymology, berlin is of slavic origin

I think thats where Bologna got it's name from as well.

Do you think that serbo-croatian sounds soft?

not really
east slavics sound very soft

How would you describe the sound of serbo-croatian?

primitive
you guys have like half the sounds we do, so yeah

Ju ar djast djelos of alfa lengvidz :dddd
Balgans best in vrld xdddd ahaha
I fak jor san stink shiter ahahah

great fucking contribution

Young Prussians