Slav

  • 81Balto-Slav — noun An ethnolinguistic designation denoting a speaker of Balto Slavic language or dialects. AGNI ( Fire ) was one of the great original deities of the Rigveda, just as fire was a principal divinity of other Indo European peoples Iranians, Greeks …

    Wiktionary

  • 82south slav — noun Usage: capitalized both Ss : a member of the Slovene, Croat, Serb, or Bulgarian peoples of the Balkans including the Serbo Croatian speaking tribes of Macedonia, Dalmatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina; specifically : yugoslav …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 83anti-Slav — n …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 84slavey — slav·ey …

    English syllables

  • 85slavic — slav·ic …

    English syllables

  • 86slavocracy — slav·oc·ra·cy …

    English syllables

  • 87slavish — slav|ish [ sleıvıʃ ] adjective always doing or following what other people say or do without thinking very much for yourself: She shows a slavish devotion to her job. It was a slavish imitation of his professor s work. ╾ slav|ish|ly adverb ╾… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 88slavish — slav•ish [[t]ˈsleɪ vɪʃ[/t]] adj. 1) of or befitting a slave: slavish subjection[/ex] 2) being or resembling a slave; abjectly submissive 3) deliberately imitative: a slavish reproduction[/ex] 4) base; mean; ignoble: slavish fears[/ex] • Etymology …

    From formal English to slang

  • 89Sclav — Slav Slav (sl[aum]v or sl[a^]v), n.; pl. {Slavs}. [A word originally meaning, intelligible, and used to contrast the people so called with foreigners who spoke languages unintelligible to the Slavs; akin to OSlav. slovo a word, slava fame, Skr. [ …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 90Slave — Slav Slav (sl[aum]v or sl[a^]v), n.; pl. {Slavs}. [A word originally meaning, intelligible, and used to contrast the people so called with foreigners who spoke languages unintelligible to the Slavs; akin to OSlav. slovo a word, slava fame, Skr. [ …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English