In terms of
classification, each Slavic literary microlanguage is traced back to one of the major Slavic languages or is closely related to it.
Pannonian Rusyn is the only language that poses a challenge in this regard.
South Slavic •
Slovene •
Prekmurje Slovene —
Prekmurje (north-eastern
Slovenia), neighbouring areas of
Austria. •
Resian dialect —
Resia Valley (
Friuli-Venezia Giulia,
Italy). • •
Serbo-Croatian •
Shtokavian •
Slavomolisano dialect (Molise Croatian) — spoken in the region of
Molise (
Italy) since the 15th–16th centuries, originally spoken in
Dalmatia. •
Slavonic-Serbian •
Kajkavian •
Chakavian •
Burgenland Croatian (Gradishan Croatian) —
Burgenland (
Austria) and surrounding areas of
Hungary. •
Bulgarian •
Banat Bulgarian dialect —
Banat (
Romania and
Serbia), spoken since the 18th century. •
Pomak — spoken by
Bulgarian Muslims in
Greece (
Pomaks). •
Macedonian •
Slavic dialects of Greece — spoken by
Macedonians in
Greece. Periodicals and books have been published in different countries, with one primer published in 1925; nowadays, as far as is known, the literary standard is no longer used.
West Slavic •
Slovak • — the language of
Protestants in eastern Slovakia since the mid-18th century •
Czech • — used by only one author — the poet
Óndra Łysohorsky — based on the
Silesian dialect •
Polish • — based on the Polish dialects of
Lithuania; attempts to introduce a literary standard were made in late 1980s
East Slavic •
Ukrainian •
West Polesian (Sudovian/Yotvingian) — south-western
Belarus •
Belarusian • — project to introduce a literary standard based on local Belarusian dialects in Lithuania; used since late 1980s •
West Polesian (Sudovian/Yotvingian) — south-western
Belarus •
Podlachian (their language) —
Podlachia • — spoken by
Rusyns in the
Zakarpattia Oblast,
Slovakia,
Poland,
Hungary Pannonian (Yugoslav) Rusyn — spoken by
Rusyns of
Vojvodina and Croatia; genetically, Pannonian Rusyn is related to the
Slovak language, however, it has experienced strong
substrate and
adstrate influence of East Slavic Rusyn dialects. Based on a set of criteria, this language occupies an intermediate position between microlanguages and the main Slavic languages. According to Aleskandr Dulichenko, the formation process of new literary microlanguages is still ongoing. One example is the Bunjevac literary standard based on
Bunjevac dialects of Serbo-Croatian spoken in
Vojvodina, introduced at the turn of the 20th century.
Bunjevci activists have established National Council of the Bunjevac Ethnic Minority () and ; who had once migrated to Vojvodina from
Dalmatia and see themselves either as a distinct
ethnic group or a subgroup of the
Croatian ethnic group. ("Bunjevac Journal") publishes articles in the Bunjevac language, and a number of primary schools have introduced Bunjevac language classes in areas populated by Bunjevci.
Silesian and Goral (standard based on the
Podhale dialect) may also be considered newly formed Slavic microlanguages. Movement for the creation of literary standards in Silesian and Goral dialects has begun in Southern Poland in the 1990s; such movements are typically decentralised: different communities propose their own
writing,
orthography and
grammar variants. Nonetheless, efforts are made to create literary works in these languages, particularly, the
Gospel has been translated into Goral. == Insular and peripheral microlanguages ==