Misplaced Pages

Prilep-Bitola dialect

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 203.206.9.81 (talk) at 03:40, 22 May 2011 (Morphological characteristics). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 03:40, 22 May 2011 by 203.206.9.81 (talk) (Morphological characteristics)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Dialectal divisions of Macedonia.

The Bitola-Prilep dialect (Template:Lang-mk, Bitolsko-prilepski dijalekt) is a member of the central subgroup of the western group of dialects of the Macedonian language. This dialect is mainly spoken in the towns of Bitola and Prilep and in surrounding areas in the Republic of Macedonia, as well as by the Slavic-speaking minority population in and around Florina (Lerin) in neighbouring Greek Macedonia. The Prilep-Bitola dialect, along with other peripheral west-central dialects, provides much of the basis for modern Standard Macedonian.

Phonological characteristics

The phonological characteristics of the Bitola-Prilep dialect which also can also be found in the other peripheral dialects are:

  • antepenultimate word stress (see Macedonian phonology)
  • the yat has reflexed into
  • absence of the intervocalic
    • in the plural forms of monosyllabic nouns, e.g. лебо(в)и:
      • (→ ) →
    • and in most other positions, e.g. то(в)ар:
      • (→ ) →
  • In the sub-dialect of Bukovo-Orehovo, especially among the oldest generations:
    • replaces in some words, e.g. for (глава, "head") and for (слама, "straw"))
    • the etymological mutates (raised) to ( ~ ) when preceding an affricate or iotated consonant, e.g. for (чаша, "cup")

Morphological characteristics

  • three definite articles pertaining to the position of the object (see Macedonian grammar)
  • the third-person personal pronouns: тој, таа, тоа, тие (he, she, it, they)
  • imperfective verbs are typically derived from perfective verbs by means of the suffix –ва (e.g. зборва and боледва)
  • 'expansion' where other dialects have palatalization: падина ("to fall", sing. present third-person) versus the standard паѓа)
  • the use of the inflectional suffix in third-person singular verbs (e.g. можи and биди versus the standard може and биде)
  • use of the oblique form for proper names
  • no distinction between masculine and feminine short possessive pronouns, i.e. consistent use of му and го for both genders and also the plural third person

Typical Words

  • Чупе – girl
  • Преѓе(ска) – recently, lately
  • Модистра – seamstress

Typical words from the Lerin sub-dialect

  • Пл'усна - fire a rifle
  • Капнат - thirsty
  • Гренди - timber

Notes

  1. author missing. Леринскиот говор. Македонски jазик, 1983, ХХХIV, стр. 23-49.
  2. Hill, Peter. The Dialect of Gorno Kalenik 1991, Columbus, OH
  3. Makedonska gramatika by Krume Kepeski Language, Vol. 27, No. 2 (Apr. - Jun., 1951), pp. 180-187
  4. Граматика на македонскиот литературен јазик, Блаже Конески, Култура, Скопје 1967, стр.68
  5. Историја на македонскиот јазик, Блаже Конески, Култура, Скопје 1986, стр. 21
  6. Friedman, Victor (1998), Macedonian: Comparative Grammar, Slavic and East European Language Research Center (SEELRC): p. 22

External links

Dialects of Macedonian
Western
Central
Western and
northwestern
Northern
Eastern
Western
Southeastern
Eastern
Southeastern
Also considered a dialect of Bulgarian. Considered to be a part of the transitional Torlak dialect and as a subdialect of Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Serbo-Croatian.
Category: