| Pannonian Rusyn Language |
Website Links For Rusyn |
Information AboutPannonian Rusyn Language |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT PANNONIAN RUSYN LANGUAGE | |
| languages of serbia | |
| languages of vojvodina | |
| languages of croatia | |
| west slavic languages | |
| endangered diaspora languages | |
| ruthenia | |
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While it is classified as a Microlanguage by the Serbian authors, it is considered a Ukrainian dialect in Ukraine (which does not recognize Rusyns as a nation) and simply as a Rusyn (Ruthenian) dialect by Slovaks and northern Ruthenians. Ethnologue consideres it a Slovak dialect. Like the northern Rusyn Language , it constitutes a mixture of some Eastern Slovak dialects and East Slavic features (namely, Russian Church Slavonic , Russian and Old Ruthenian ). This mixture is due to the fact that these Rusyns emigrated to Bačka from Eastern Slovakia around the middle of the 18th Century . Like most modern Ruthenians, they are Greek Catholics and therefore have closer ties with Ukraine. The language also has some Southern Slavic features, and it is sometimes called "a Slavic Esperanto". Since the Rusyn language was officially not recognized/prohibited in Ukraine and in Czechoslovakia in the past (Ukrainian was prescribed for Rusyns), the Rusyns in Yugoslavia, where the language was recognized, had to create their own language codification: The language has been codified by Mikola Kočiš (Микола Кочиш) in ''Правопис руского язика'' ('Orthography of Rusyn', 1971) and ''Ґраматика руского язика'' ('Grammar of Rusyn', 1974) and is written with Cyrillic letters. , 23,5% Hungarian , 5,7% Slovak , 5,7% Romanian , 3,8% Rusyn, 2,2% Romany , and 0,2% Ukrainian . SEE ALSO |
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