Boholano dialect

Boholano (Cebuano: Binol-anon) is a variant of the Cebuano language spoken in the island province of Bohol in the Visayas and a major portion of Southern Leyte, as well as parts of Mindanao, particularly in Northern Mindanao and Caraga Region. It is sometimes erroneously described as a separate language[2] even though Binol-anon originated as a dialect continuum of the Cebuano language.[3][4]

Boholano
Bol-anon, Binol-anon, Bisaya nga Binol-anon, Binisaya nga Bol-anon
RegionBohol, Southern Leyte and parts of Northern Mindanao and Caraga Region
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologboho1237[1]

Boholano, especially as spoken in central Bohol, can be distinguished from other Cebuano variants by a few phonetic changes:

  • The semivowel y is pronounced [dʒ] as is the ll sound: iya is pronounced [iˈdʒa];
  • Ako is pronounced as [aˈho];
  • Intervocalic l is occasionally pronounced as [w] when following u or o: kulang is pronounced as [ˈkuwaŋ] (the same as Cebu City dialect).

The Boholano dialects of western Bohol, including Tagbilaran, though, are almost indistinguishable from other dialects near Cebu City. Furthermore, the phonetic changes detailed above, especially the latter two, can also be observed in the Cebu City dialect.

History

The Bol-anon developed in the region after the Cebuano language arrived there from Cebu. Cebuano in turn was spoken since Proto-Austronesian (ca. 6000 years ago) in the Sugbu heartland[3] and then "has spread from its base in Cebu" to Bohol thus began the Bohol Cebuano dialect.[4]

gollark: Hutter search can find an asymptotically optimal solution to any well-defined problem, see.
gollark: Just define your problem generation problem rigorously and use Hutter search.
gollark: Just iterate over all possible strings and look for the most problemy ones.
gollark: Oh yes, I'll just do a 1729-dimensional Fourier transform on this 8051 to multiply these integers
gollark: In any case, the asymptotically-fastest multiplication algorithms are worse for any problem which fits into the universe.

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Boholano". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  2. "Lowlands-L Anniversary Celebration". www.lowlands-l.net.
  3. "John Woff, "Cebuano" in Facts About the World's Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages, Past and Present (New York: H. W. Wilson, 2001). https://archive.org/details/rosettaproject_ceb_detail-2
  4. Wolff, John U. (1972). A Dictionary of Cebuano Visayan (PDF). Cornell University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-09-30.
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