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Slovakians

Slovaks
Slováci
Total population
(c. 5.5–6 million)
Regions with significant populations
Slovakia Slovakia 4,352,775
 United States 810,000  
 Czech Republic 147,152  
 Canada 100,000  
 United Kingdom 85,000  
 Serbia 52,750  
 Austria 35,450  
 Hungary 29,647  
 Germany 25,200  
 France 23,000  
 Argentina 22,500  
 Romania 17,226  
 Italy 15,000  
 Australia 12,000  
 Ireland 10,801  
 Israel 10,000  
 Ukraine 6,397  
 Croatia 4,712  
 Belgium 4,000  
 Brazil 3,000  
 Chile 2,300  
 Poland 2,000  
 Netherlands 1,800  
 Spain 1,600  
 South Africa 800  
Languages
Slovak
Religion
Majority Roman Catholicism,Protestantism
Minority Eastern Orthodoxy, Jewish
Related ethnic groups
Other West Slavs such as Czechs, Poles and other Slavs

The Slovaks or Slovak people (Slovak: Slováci, singular Slovák, feminine Slovenka, plural Slovenky) are a nation and West Slavic ethnic group native to Slovakia who speak the Slovak language.

Most Slovaks today live within the borders of the independent Slovakia, c. 4.4 million ethnic Slovaks of 5.4 million total population. There are Slovak minorities in Czech Republic, Croatia, Poland, Hungary, Serbia and sizeable populations of immigrants and their descendants in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

The name Slovak is derived from *Slověninъ, plural *Slověně, the old name of the Slavs. In the Slovak language; only the masculine noun Slověninъ, Slověn changed to Slovän, Slovan and finally (under Czech and Polish influence) to Slovák around 1400. The older form Sloven is preserved in all similar words in the Slovak language – the adjective "Slovak" is still slovenský, the feminine noun "Slovak" is still Slovenka and the country is Slovensko.

In 1029 St. Emeric, ruler of the Nitrian principality is called Henricus dux Sclavonie. In 1113 Nestor calls the territory of Slovakia - Slověnskaja zemlja. The first written mention about usage of the new form Slovak in the territory of present-day Slovakia is from Bardejov (1444) – "Nicoulaus Cossibor hauptman, Nicolaus Czech et Slowak, stipendiarii supremi". The mentions in Czech sources are older – 1375 and 1385. The change is not related to ethnogenesis of Slovaks, but exclusively to linguistic changes in the West Slavic languages. The word Slovak was also used later as a common name for all Slavs in Czech, Polish and also Slovak language in parallel with other forms.


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