Additional
Information: The Slavic family is divided into three branches: East Slavic including Belarusan, Russian and Ukrainian; West Slavic including Czech, Polish, Slovak and Sorbian; South Slavic including Bulgarian, Macedonian, Old Church Slavonic, Serbo-Croatian and Sloven
Tanya Translations Tanya Translations: Translations and personalized educational services in the Ukrainian and Russian languages. (Slavic) http://users.swing.be/tanyatra/indexuk.html
Czech and Slovak Language Courses Czech and Slovak Language Courses: Collection of language tools, textbooks, study aids and audio tapes for the Czech and Slovak languages. (Slavic) http://www.iarelative.com/books/language.htm
Transliteration Tables Transliteration Tables: Princeton University Slavic cataloging manual. Also includes non-Slavic languages using Cyrillic characters. (Slavic) http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/katmandu/sgman/sltrans.html
Slavic Languages in Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar Slavic Languages in Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar: Publications, mailing list, and links related to the linguistic work carried out within the formal linguistic (generative) framework. (Slavic) http://www.ipipan.waw.pl/mmgroup/HPSG/slavic.html
Dr. Berlin's Foreign Font Archive for Cyrillic Dr. Berlin's Foreign Font Archive for Cyrillic: Fonts for many Slavic languages including Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian and Serbian. (Slavic) http://user.dtcc.edu/~berlin/font/cyrillic.htm
Macedonian and Bulgarian Macedonian and Bulgarian: Historical background and dialects of these two very closely related languages. Includes sample sentences with literal translations. (Slavic) http://www.ucc.ie/staff/jprodr/macedonia/macmodlan.html
Early Slavic Studies Association Early Slavic Studies Association: Scholarly, non-profit organization based in the US dedicated to fostering the study of pre-eighteenth century Slavic studies. (Slavic) http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~essa/index.html
Balto-Slavic Accentuation: Some News Travels Slowly Balto-Slavic Accentuation: Some News Travels Slowly: Scholarly article (1994) on the history of Balto-Slavic accentuation patterns, by Frederik Kortlandt. (Slavic) http://www.kortlandt.nl/publications/art218e.pdf