| BULGARIAN LANGUAGE
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SOME FACTS
Bulgarian language, member of the South
Slavic group of the Slavonic subfamily of
the Indo-European family of languages. Bulgarian
is the native tongue of some 9 million people,
most of whom live in Bulgaria, where it
is the official language. It is also spoken
to some extent in bordering and nearby countries.
Although the Bulgars were originally a Turkic-speaking
people from Asia, they merged with the Slavic
tribes whom they conquered in the 7th cent.
A.D. in the territory of present-day Bulgaria
and took over their Slavic language. Old
Bulgarian is an alternate name for the literary
and liturgical language of the 9th to 11th
cent. A.D. that is usually called Old Church
Slavonic. From Old Church Slavonic, in Bulgaria,
a later local form known as Bulgarian Church
Slavonic evolved, which was current from
the 12th to the 15th cent. The Turkish conquest
of Bulgaria in 1396 seriously hampered the
development of the Bulgarian language for
several centuries.
After the Bulgarians achieved independence
in 1878, a modern literary language based
on the vernacular came into its own. Modern
Bulgarian, which is generally said to date
from the 16th cent., borrowed many words
from Greek and Turkish during the period
of Turkish domination; more recently it
has borrowed words from Russian, French,
and German. The Bulgarian language lacks
definite rules for stress; therefore, the
accent of every word must be learned individually.
Unlike most other Slavic tongues, Bulgarian
has a definite article. This is in the form
of a suffix joined to the noun. Another
difference between Bulgarian and most other
Slavic languages is that Bulgarian has almost
completely dropped the numerous case forms
of the noun. It uses position and prepositions
(like English) to indicate grammatical relationships
in a sentence instead of cases (like Russian).
Despite these differences, Bulgarian closely
resembles the other Slavic languages, especially
with regard to grammar. A modified form
of the Cyrillic alphabet is used for writing
Bulgarian.
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