Tables
3.2Phoneme inventories of contemporary standard Slavic languages, shaded by frequency
4.1Positional consonant inventories for two stages of Late Proto-Slavic, Slovak, and Bulgarian
4.2The composition of two-consonant onset clusters in terms of sonority classes in Late PSL, BCS, Lower Sorbian, and Russian
4.3Major sonority-type combinations in two-consonant onset clusters in Slavic languages
4.4Sonority plateau onset clusters with two stops/affricates in Slavic languages
4.5The composition of two-consonant coda clusters in terms of sonority classes in Late PSL, BCS, Lower Sorbian, and Russian
7.1Segmentability of accusative markers in masculine o-stems at different diachronic stages
7.2LCS hard o-stem declension (masculine, neuter); *dǫbъ m ‘oak’ / *lěto n ‘summer’
7.3LCS soft jo-stem declension (masculine, neuter); *rojь m ‘swarm’ / *moŕe n ‘sea’
7.5LCS i-stem declension (feminine, masculine); *kostь f ‘bone’ / *pǫtь m ‘way’
7.6LCS hard ā-stem declension (feminine, masculine); *žena ‘woman’
7.7LCS soft jā-stem declension (feminine, masculine); *svěťa ‘candle’
7.8LCS consonant-stem declension (neuter s-stem); *slovo ‘word’
7.9LCS consonant-stem declension (feminine r-stem); *mati ‘mother’
7.10Declension of a prototypical Macroclass I noun (masculine virile/animate); ‘student’
7.11Declension of a prototypical Macroclass II noun (feminine); ‘card/map’
7.12Declension of a prototypical Macroclass III noun (feminine); productive suffix *-ost-ь
7.13Declension of LCS first person pronouns (full and clitic where applicable)
7.14Declension of LCS second person pronouns (full and clitic where applicable)
7.15LCS hard pronominal declension, masculine and neuter; *tъ ‘that’
7.17LCS soft pronominal declension, masculine and neuter; *mojь ‘my’
7.19Declension of LCS genderless interrogative/indefinite pronouns
7.20LCS long adjectival declension (hard subtype), masculine and neuter; *novъ ‘new’
7.21LCS long adjectival declension (hard subtype), feminine; *novъ ‘new’
7.22(Long) adjective declension in the modern Slavic languages (hard subtype where applicable)
7.23Declension of definite forms for ‘old man’ and ‘sister’ in the dialect of Boboščica/Boboshticë, Albania
9.5Present tense -a-class (South and West Slavic) and -j-class (Lower Sorbian)
9.13Periphrastic perfect/global past forms in Slavic languages
9.15Periphrastic pluperfect with imperfect-tense auxiliaries
9.29Analytic imperative: particle + infinitive/supine/da-construction
10.3The five situation types and the Russian perfective: imperfective opposition
14.2Differences between IP-absorption and CP-absorption languages
21.1Twelve voices logically possible for a bivalent verb, eight of which are found in Slavic
21.3Slavic oblique voices for bivalent transitive verbs per branch/language
23.3‘Begin – end’ and ‘do – undo’ antonyms across Slavic languages
26.1Region-specific sub-corpora for Russian bloggers in Livejournal
26.2Distribution of communicative functions in three Russian corpora as compared to English
28.1Reflexes of velar palatalizations in Old Church Slavonic
28.2Relative chronology of First Velar Palatalization, monophthongization of i-diphthongs, and Second Velar Palatalization
28.4Reflexes of *tj, *kt’,*dj in modern Slavic dialect areas
28.5Relative chronologies of the lenition of *g > γ and the fall of weak jers
28.6Long : short vowel pairs in Dlhé nad Cirochou (Humenné Sotak dialect of ESk)
30.3Six features of LML in contrast to national standard language
33.2Examples of Modern Church Slavonic grammatical distinctions