From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishSlavicSlav‧ic /ˈslɑːvɪk $ ˈslɑː-, ˈslæ-/ (also Slavonic) adjectiverelating to the Slavs or their languagesExamples from the CorpusSlavic• It was a community of about 5,000 people who enjoyed a rareSlavicculture.• With Slavicdelight in swerving to extremes, many an artist initially turned to abstraction.• He stands at the very threshold of the age of electrical power-the Slavicgenius who made it possible.• I call it Slavic just because the Slavs were there first.• Slavic languages• Outside, the streets are nearly deserted, the Slavic moon's face nearly full.• Pity that this convoluted attitude towards violence doesn't prevail in all Slavicsocietiestoday.• Once, in the seventies, I used to dine in Slavic splendor at places like the GoldenShell.• Almost a century later Manaus's neglectedcultural life is re-emerging with a Slavictwist.OriginSlavic(1800-1900)Slav“Slavic person”((14-21 centuries)), from Medieval LatinSclavus, from Late Greek, from Sklabenoi“Slavs”, from a Slavic language