NonSlavic
NonSlavic, often written non-Slavic, is a label used in linguistics and ethnography for languages and peoples that are not part of the Slavic branch of the Indo-European language family. The term is descriptive, applied to linguistic groups and cultural communities outside East, West, and South Slavic languages, and it is not a fixed ethnolinguistic category.
Within Europe, Slavic languages include Russian, Ukrainian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Slovenian, and
Geographically, non-Slavic communities appear across Central, Southern, and Eastern Europe—such as Germans and Austrians in Central
Usage and caveats: non-Slavic is a broad, descriptive term rather than a precise linguistic unit. Many non-Slavic