The Slavic or Slavonic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family, spoken mainly in eastern Europe and Siberia.
The usual classification is the following.
They share some features especially with the Baltic languages. This is why these language families are sometimes considered as one big Indo-European subgroup known as Balto-Slavic, though the exact relationship between Baltic and Slavic languages remains uncertain. The similarities may also have resulted from the historical contact between the languages, not from a direct genetic relationship.
Slavic languages are written either in the Latin alphabet or in the Cyrillic alphabet. Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian and Macedonian use the Cyrillic script. Serbian and Belarussian are written in the Cyrillic or the Latin script, while other Slavic languages are written in the Latin script.