South Slavic languages

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South Slavic
Geographic
distribution:
Eastern Europe
Genetic
classification
:
Indo-European
 Satem
  Balto-Slavic
   Slavic
    South Slavic
Subdivisions:
Eastern South Slavic
Central South Slavic
Western South Slavic
Image:Slavic europe.svg

     Countries where a South Slavic language is the national language

South Slavic
languages and dialects
Western South Slavic
Slovenian
Central South Slavic diasystem
Bosnian · Bunjevac
Burgenland Croatian · Croatian
Montenegrin · Serbian
Serbo-Croatian · Šokac
Romano-Serbian · Slavoserbian
Differences between Serbian,
Croatian, and Bosnian
Dialects
Chakavian · Molise Croatian
Shtokavian · Užice speech
Eastern South Slavic
Old Church Slavonic
Church Slavonic
Bulgarian · Macedonian
Dialects
Banat Bulgarian · Slavic dialects of Greece
Transitional dialects
Eastern-Central
Torlak dialects · Našinski · Shopski
Western-Central
Kajkavian
Alphabets
Modern
Gaj’s Latin alphabet1 · Serbian Cyrillic
Macedonian Cyrillic · Bulgarian Cyrillic
Slovenian alphabet
Historical
Bohoričica · Dajnčica · Metelčica
Bosnian Cyrillic · Glagolitic
Early Cyrillic
1 Includes Banat Bulgarian alphabet
which is based on it
v  d  e

South Slavic languages comprise one of the three groups of Slavic languages (besides West and East Slavic). There are around 30 million speakers of these languages, mainly in the Balkans. The South Slavic languages are further subdivided into Eastern and Western groups.

German, Hungarian and Romanian generally form a belt which geographically separate speakers of South Slavic languages from their counterpart West and East Slavic language users.

Contents

[edit] Classification

Slavic languages belong to Balto-Slavic family, which originates from Centum-Satem isogloss of the Indo-European languages family.

South Slavic languages form a dialectal continuum stretching from today's southern Austria to southeast Bulgaria. On the level of dialectology or linguistic typology, several major dialects can be distinguished, but their borders are blurred due to strong contact and frequent migrations in the past. On the other hand, cultural establishment and national liberation from occupying Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian Empires, followed by formation of nation-states in 19th and 20th century, caused development of standard national languages. These processes have (almost) ended just at the end of 20th century, with the breakup of Yugoslavia (with only the Montenegrin national and linguistic issue left to be resolved). Most of those languages selected one dialect as the basis; as a result, some dialects got deprecated and marginalized, while others flourished. Further, the national and ethnic borders do not coincide with dialectal boundaries in most cases.

Thus, two distinct classifications of South Slavic languages can be drawn; one from a genetic linguistic point of view, and the other from a sociolinguistic or political point of view. The two classifications seldom map 1:1. While e.g. Slovenians basically speak the same dialect, codified as Slovenian language, Croats speak three main and two exclaval dialects in four countries, while their standard language is based on Štokavian Ijekavian.

Note: Due to different political statuses of languages/dialects and different historical contexts, the classifications are necessarily arbitrary to some extent.

[edit] Genetic linguistic classification

Notes
  1. ^ Torlakian can be treated as the part of East South Slavic languages. Speakers can be ethnic Serbs, Bulgarians and Macedonians, mostly depending on their country of origin, although there is a Torlak-speaking Bulgarian minority in Serbia (the Western Outlands) and a corresponding Serbian one in the north of the Republic of Macedonia). Most of Torlakian now belong to Serbian diasystem.
  2. ^ Traditional naming of the diasystem was Serbo-Croatian; today Croatian and Serbian linguists are trying to avoid the term "Serbo-Croatian", although it is still used outside of the former Yugoslavia.
  3. ^ a b c d Some linguists classify Štokavian and Chakavian as Central South Slavic, and Kajkavian and Slovenian as Western South Slavic

[edit] Sociolinguistic classification

South Slavic languages

[edit] Eastern group of South Slavic languages

[edit] Bulgarian dialects

Main article: Bulgarian language

[edit] Macedonian dialects

Main article: Macedonian language

[edit] Transitional South Slavic languages

[edit] Torlakian dialect

Main article: Torlakian dialect

There also exists another dialect, called torlački or torlak, which is spoken in southern and eastern Serbia, northern Republic of Macedonia and western Bulgaria, and often considered transitional between Central and Eastern group of South Slavic languages.

It is even thought to fit into the so-called Balkansprachbund, an area of linguistic convergence among languages due to long-term contact rather than being related.

[edit] Central or Eastern Western group of South Slavic languages

[edit] History

Each of these primary and secondary dialectical units breaks down into subdialects and accents by region. In the past (and now in mountains and islands), it was not uncommon for individual villages to have some of their own words and phrases. However, throughout the twentieth century the various dialects have been strongly influenced by the Štokavian standards through mass media and public education, and much of the "local color" has been lost chiefly in towns.

With the breakup of Yugoslavia, nationalism has also caused many, especially in Bosnia and Hercegovina, to modify their speech, or even attempt to change dialects entirely. The various wars have also caused mass migrations, and changed the ethnic makeup of some areas, especially in Bosnia, but also in central Croatia and in Serbia (especially in Vojvodina). In some areas it is unclear whether location or ethnicity is now the dominant factor in the dialect of the speaker.

Because of these forces, the speech patterns of some communities and regions are in a state of flux, and it is difficult to determine which dialects will die out entirely. Further research over the next few decades will be necessary to determine the changes made in the dialectical distribution of the language.

[edit] Dialect to language name mapping

The table below shows the relationship between the dialects of Central South Slavic diasystem and the names their native speakers might call them.

Dialect Sub-Dialect Serbian Croatian Bosnian Montenegrin
Štokavian Torlakian dialect x x
Zeta-South Sandžak x x x
Eastern Herzgovinian x x x x
Šumadija-Vojvodina x
Western Ikavian x x
Kosovo-Resava x
Eastern Bosnian x x x
Slavonian x
Čakavian x
Kajkavian x

[edit] Rendering of yat

The Proto-Slavic vowel jat has changed over time and is now being rendered in three different ways:

  • In Ekavian (ekavski), jat has morphed into the vowel e.
  • in Ikavian (ikavski), the vowel i.
  • in Ijekavian or Jekavian (ijekavski or jekavski), the diphthong ie (written/pronounced as ije or je), depending on whether the vowel was long or short or what the dialect is: in Eastern Herzegovina, Northern Montenegro and Dubrovnik area long diphthong is pronounced as ije, but in Sarajevo or Zagreb, long diphthong is pronounced as je [where 'e' is long]). All standard languages follow pronounce from Eastern Herzegovina, Northern Montenegro and Dubrovnik.

The following are some examples:

EnglishPredecessorEkavianIkavianIjekavian
timevrěmevremevrimevrijeme
beautifullěplepliplijep
girlděvojkadevojkadivojkadjevojka
truevěranveranviranvjeran
villageseloseloseloselo
to needtrěbatitrebatitribat(i)trebati
to heatgrějatigrejatigrijat(i)grijati
newsvěstivestivistivijesti

The first two examples involve long vowels. For instance, the first e in vreme and the i in vrime are long, so the long diphthong ije is found in the Ijekavian form. In the third and fourth examples, the corresponding ekavian and ikavian vowels are short, so the short diphthong je is found in the Ijekavian form.

However, there are some cases where that pattern of correspondence is altered. The fifth example, selo, is there as an example of a word in which the e did not derive from jat, and hence the word is the same in all three dialects. In other cases, especially when the jat follows an r, Ijekavian also formed out an e, as we see in the sixth example, or an i as in the seventh example.

The example sentence in the following sections means approximately "What is, is; it's how it always was, what will be, will be, and it'll be somehow!"

[edit] Štokavian dialects and languages

[edit] Shtokavian dialects

Main article: Štokavian dialect

The Shtokavian dialect is spoken chiefly in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Hercegovina, and in 2/3 of Croatia. The Serbian and Croatian standard languages are all based on the shtokavian dialect.

The primary subdivisions of Shtokavian are based on the different ways the jat vowel has been changed. There are other differences between the standard dialects, including vocabulary, some syntax, and orthography. See Differences in official languages in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia.

Example:

  • Serbian
    • Ekavian
      • Cyrillic: Што јест, јест; тако је увек било, што ће бити, биће, а некако већ ће бити!
      • Latin: Što jest, jest; tako je uvek bilo, što će biti, biće, a nekako već će biti!
    • Iyekavian
      • Latin: Što jest, jest; tako je uvijek bilo, što će biti, biće, a nekako već će biti!
      • Cyrillic: Што јест, јест; тако је увијек било, што ће бити, биће, а некако већ ће бити!
  • Croatian (Iyekavian, Latin): Što jeste, jeste; tako je uvijek bilo, što će biti, bit će, a nekako će već biti!

Note that all variants were correct in Serbo-Croatian standard language.

[edit] Molise Croatian

The Molise Croatian (or Molise Slavic) dialect is spoken in three villages of the Italian region of Molise, by the descendants of South Slavs who migrated there from the eastern Adriatic coast in the 15th century. Because these people have migrated away from the rest of their kinsmen so long ago, their diaspora language is rather distinct from the standard language, and rather influenced by Italian.

[edit] Dialects and official languages

The Croatian and Serbian standard languages (as well as former Serbo-Croatian standard language) are all mainly based on the Štokavian dialect, although if they are considered as systems of dialects, one might observe that:

Note that people in census also declare Bunjevac language, although this is not in official use. In the old censuses performed in Austria-Hungary, the Šokac language was also listed.

[edit] Čakavian dialects and languages

[edit] Čakavian dialects

Main article: Chakavian dialect

Chakavian (Čakavian) is spoken in the western, central, and southern parts of Croatia, mainly in Istria, Kvarner Gulf, Dalmatia, and also in Croatian inlands (Gacka, Pokupje etc.). The Čakavian renders yat mostly as i or also as e (rarely as ye), or even mixed Ekavian-Ikavian. Many dialects of Čakavian have a lot of loan words from Venetian, Italian, Greek and other Mediterranean languages.

Example: Ča je, je, tako je vavik bilo, ča će bit, će bit, a nekako će već bit!

[edit] Burgenland Croatian

This dialect is spoken primarily in the federal state of Burgenland in Austria, but also in nearby areas in Vienna, Slovakia, and Hungary by descendants of Croats who migrated there in the 16th century. This dialect or possibly family of dialects is quite different from standard Croatian. It has been heavily influenced by German and also Hungarian. In addition, it has some properties from all three of the major dialectical groups in Croatia, as the migrants did not all come from the same areas of Croatia. The "micro-literary" standard is based on a Čakavian dialect, and, like all Čakavian dialects, is characterized by very conservative grammatical structures: it preserves, prominently, case endings lost in the Štokavian base of standard Serbo-Croatian.

At most 100,000 people speak Burgenland Croatian and almost all are bilingual in German. Its future is uncertain, but there is some movement to preserve it. It has official status in six districts of Burgenland, and is used in some schools in Burgenland and neighboring western parts of Hungary.

[edit] Western group of South Slavic languages

[edit] Kaykavian dialects

Main article: Kajkavian dialect

Kaykavian is mostly spoken in northern and northwest Croatia including 1/3 of country near the Hungarian and Slovenian borders: chiefly in and around towns Zagreb, Varaždin, Čakovec, Koprivnica, Petrinja, Delnice, etc. It renders jat mostly as e (rarely as diphthong ie); note that this pronouncing cannot be equated to that of the ekavian-shtokavian dialects, as many kaykavian dialects distinguish a closed e nearly ae (from yat) and an open e (from original e).

It almost lacks several palatals (ć, lj, nj, dž) found in Shtokavian dialect, and has some loanwords from the nearby Slovenian dialects, as well as from German chiefly in towns.

Example: Kak je, tak je; tak je navek bilo, kak bu tak bu, a bu vre nekak kak bu!

[edit] Slovenian language

Main article: Slovenian language

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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