- Smolyan dialect
The Smolyan dialect or Central Rhodope dialect is a Bulgarian dialect of the Rhodopean group of the
Rup dialects . Its range includes most of the CentralRhodopes , i.e. the region ofSmolyan . Its immediate neighbours are the RhodopeanHvoyna dialect to the north, theSerres-Nevrokop dialect and theRazlog dialect to the west and the Turkish dialects of the Turkish population in the Eastern Rhodopes. To the south, the Smolyan dialect crosses the Greek-Bulgarian border and is spoken by much of the Muslim Bulgarian (Pomak) population inWestern Thrace . As a result of the rugged mountainous terrain and the century-long isolation of the region from the rest of the country, the Smolyan dialect is the most idiosyncratic of all Bulgarian dialects (including theWestern Central Macedonian dialects ) and is not readily understandable even for its immediate neighbours.Phonological and morphological characteristics
* The most important phonological characteristic of the Smolyan dialect is the existence of broad o ("oa"), which is pronounced approximately as the long Swedish "a" but without the length, i.e. as a broad open "o" which resembles the consonant "a" at the end of its articulation. Old Church Slavonic big yus Unicode |ѫ, little yus Unicode|ѧ, ь and ъ have all merged into the open o in the Smolyan dialect, when they are in a stressed syllable: "зоап" vs. formal Bulgarian "зъп" (tooth), "зIPA|ʲоат" vs. formal Bulgarian "зет" (son-in-law), "зоалва" vs. formal Bulgarian "зълва" (sister-in-law). When the four vowels are in an unstressed syllable, they have merged into a slightly reduced a
* Broad e (IPA|æ) for Old Church Slavonicyat in all positions and regardless of the word stress and the character of the following syllable: "бIPA|æл/бIPA|æли" vs. formal Bulgarian "бял/бели" (white), "голIPA|ʲIPA|æм"/"голIPA|ʲIPA|æми" vs. formal Bulgarian "голям/големи" (big). This makes the Smolyan dialect extremely archaic as the broad e is considered to be the original pronunciation of Old Church Slavonic yat. The broad e has also replaced Old Bulgarian я in all positions: "доашIPA|ʲтIPA|ʲерIPA|ʲIPA|æ" vs. formal Bulgarian "дъштерIPA|ʲа" (daughter)
* Old Bulgarian groups ър/ьр and ъл/ьл are pronounced only as ър/ъл, i.e. as оар/оал: "воарх" vs. formal Bulgarian "връх" (summit) "жIPA|ʲоалт" vs. formal Bulgarian "жълт" (yellow)
* Preservation of Old Bulgarian vowel ы IPA|(ɨ) in the southern subdialect: "сын" vs. formal Bulgarian "син" (blue). This makes the Smolyan dialect extremely archaic as IPA|(ɨ) is considered to be the original pronunciation of Old Church Slavonic ы
* Articulation of unstressed o as a (as in Russian): "кабила" vs. formal Bulgarian "кобила" (mare)
* Triple definite article: -oaт, -та, -то, -тIPA|æ for general cases, -oaс, -са, -со, -сIPA|æ for objects situated "close" to the speaker and -oaн, -на, -но, -нIPA|æ for objects situated "far" from the speaker
* A number of well-preserved case forms: agglomerative forms for family and personal names (as in theCentral Balkan dialect , cf. article); dative forms for sing. nouns: "сину" vs. formal Bulgarian "на сина", etc.
* Verb ending -м for verbs in 1st and 2nd conjugation: "ходIPA|ʲам" vs. formal Bulgarian "ходIPA|ʲа" (I walk)
* A number of lexical idiosyncrasies: "галеница" vs. formal Bulgarian "любовница" (female lover)For other phonological and morphological characteristics typical for all Rup or Rhodopean dialects, cf.
Rup dialects .ources
Стойков, Стойко: Българска диалектология, Акад. изд. "Проф. Марин Дринов", 2006 [http://www.promacedonia.org/jchorb/st/st_2_b_izt_3.htm#smoljanski]
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