- Southwestern Bulgarian dialects
The Southwestern Bulgarian dialects are a group of Bulgarian dialects which are located west of the
yat boundary and are part of the Western Bulgarian dialects. The range of the Southwestern dialects on the territory of Bulgaria includes most of west central and southwesternBulgaria . The Southwestern dialects border on the Northwestern dialects to the north, the Transitional dialects to the northwest and theBalkan dialects and theRup dialects to the northeast and southeast, respectively. If the Macedonian language is regarded as a third literary form of Modern Bulgarian, then the Southwestern dialects extend west and southwest to include the Slavic dialects inVardar Macedonia and the western half ofGreek Macedonia . Should the Macedonian language be counted as a separate language, then the southernmost dialect of the group, the Blagoevgrad-Petrich or Pirin dialect, along with the corresponding variety on the Macedonian side of the border, the Maleshevo dialect, constitute a transitional dialect between Bulgarian and Macedonian [cite book
last =Sussex
first =Roland
coauthors =Paul Cubberley
title =The Slavic Languages
publisher =Cambridge University Press
date =2006
url =http://books.google.com/books?id=G2bsJdYrwD4C&dq=Bulgarian+dialects+Pirin&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0
pages =p.510
isbn =0521223156 ] . A defining characteristic of the Southwestern dialects is the gradual transition from one dialect to another, as well as to dialects which belong to other dialectal groups. For example, theDupnitsa dialect is transitional to both theSamokov dialect and theBlagoevgrad-Petrich dialect , theBotevgrad dialect is transitional to the Eastern BulgarianBalkan dialects , and especially to thePirdop dialect , etc. etc.Phonological and morphological characteristics
* Old Church Slavonic Unicode|ѣ (yat) is always pronounced as IPA|ɛ vs. formal Bulgarian я/е (IPA|ʲa/IPA|ɛ) – "бел/бели"
* щ/жд (IPA|ʃt/IPA|ʒd) for Proto-Slavic IPA|*tʲ/IPA|*dʲ (as in Standard Bulgarian) - "леща, между" (lentils, between). The future tense particle is, however, different in the different dialects: "ще", "ше", "че", "кIPA|ʲе", "кIPA|ʲу"
* The reflex of Old Church Slavonic Unicode |ѫ (yus) is generally a, with the exception of theSofia dialect where it is ъ (IPA|ə): "кашта" vs. formal Bulgarian "къшта" (house)
* The reflex of Old Church Slavonic ъ gradually shifts from north to south from only a to both a and o. The northern dialects (e.g. theVratsa dialect ) have only a, the central ones (e.g. theIhtiman dialect ) have mostly a with occurrences of o only in certain suffixes and prefixes, the southern ones (e.g. theMaleševo-Pirin dialect ) have only o in suffixes and prefixes and some roots and a in other roots
* Preserved transition of o into e after ж IPA|/ʒ/, ш IPA|/ʃ/, ч IPA|/ʧ/: "ножеве" vs. formal Bulgarian "ножове" (knives)
* Single masculine definite article -o (as in theMoesian dialects ) or a (as in the BalkanPirdop dialect ), depending on the dialect: "гар'бо/гар'бa" vs. Standard Bulgarian "гър'бът" (the back).
* Widespread formation of past passive participles with "-н": "чуен" vs. formal Bulgarian "чут" (heard)
* Suffix "-чки" instead of "-шки" for formation of certain adjectives: "човечки" vs. "човешки"For the phonological and morphological characteristics of the individual dialects included in the dialectal group, cf. individual articles.
ources
Стойков, Стойко: Българска диалектология, Акад. изд. "Проф. Марин Дринов", 2006 [http://www.promacedonia.org/jchorb/st/st_2_b_zap_2.htm]
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