Abstract

Slovene as a South Slavic language shares some common features not only with other South Slavic languages, but also with West Slavic languages. But it is also important for comparative studies with Balkan languages, because Slovene has beside a well-known tendency for synthetism, e.g. the dual and the supine after verbs of motion, a tendancy for analytism. In spite of these peculiarities Slovene is not a Balkan language, it doesn't belong to the Balkan Sprachbund.

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