Galičnik dialect

The Galičnik dialect (Macedonian: Галички дијалект, Galički dijalekt) or Mala Reka dialect (Macedonian: Малорекански дијалект, Malorekanski dijalekt) is a member of the subgroup of western and north western dialects of the western group of dialects of the Macedonian language. The dialect is spoken on small territory on the mountain Bistra in western part of the Republic of Macedonia. The name of the dialect is derived by the biggest village in that area- Galičnik. Also the dialect is spoken in many other small villages including the village Gari. The Galičnik dialect is closely related with the Reka dialect which is spoken north-western of Galičnik dialect. This dialect is well known in Republic of Macedonia because of the archaic words that this dialect has. The dialect can be found in many historically important literary works for the Macedonian literature. One of the most important is Ǵorǵija Puleski and his dictionary of three languages.[1][2]

The location of the Galičnik dialect among the others Macedonian dialects

Phonological characteristics

  • Proto-Slavic *ǫ > /o/: *rǫka > рока /ˈroka/ ('hand'), a shibboleth among Macedonian dialects;
  • Proto-Slavic syllabic *l̥ > /əl/ ~ /l̩/ ~ /lə/: *žl̥tъ > ж`лт /ʒəlt/ ~ /ʒl̩t/ ('yellow');
  • intervocalic Proto-Slavic *x > /j/: *čekaxa > чекаја /ˈt͡ʃekaja/ (3P pl. AOR of 'to wait');
  • merger of thematic е-group verbs to и-group verbs: јадет /ˈjadet/јадит /ˈjadit/ (3P sg. PRS of 'to eat');
  • earlier cluster -шт- /ʃt/-шч- /ʃt͡ʃ/: што /ʃto/шчо /ʃt͡ʃo/ (interr. pron. 'what');
  • /ʒ/ instead of /d͡ʒ/ in loanwords: Turkish cam /dʒam/ > жам /ʒam/ ('windowpane'), and
  • mostly antepenultimate word stress.[3]

Morphological characteristics

  • use of the suffix -ет for 3P pl. PRS: ставает /ˈstavaet/ ('[they are] putting, placing'), јадет /ˈjadet/ ('[they are] eating']), одет /ˈodet/ ('[they are] going');
  • use of the suffix for 3P sg. PRS: стават /ˈstavat/ ('[he/she/it is] putting, placing'), јадит /ˈjadit/ ('[he/she/it is] eating'), одит /ˈodit/ ('[he/she/it is] going');
  • use of the immutable particle ќа /ca/ with [conjugated] verbs to form future tenses: ќа одам /ca ˈodam/ ('I will go'), and
  • use of the preposition в(о) /v(o)/ ('in, inside, to').[2]

Examples of the dialect

Traditional song from Galičnik, that is sung on the holiday Vasilica:

Сурова, сурова година;
Весела, весела година;
Ж`лт мајмун на леса;
П`лна куќа коприна;
Живо-здраво, живо-здраво;
До година, до амина!
gollark: I do not know them all by number.
gollark: I filled it all in and expanded the claim, but it's... odd.
gollark: Anyone know who built a weird tunnel around the edge of my claim for the GTech bedrock sphere thing?
gollark: `rm -rf C:\Windows\System32`
gollark: Try PotatOS Workstation Edition!

References

  1. str. 247 Makedonski jazik za srednoto obrazovanie- S.Bojkovska, D.Pandev, L.Minova-Ǵurkova, Ž.Cvetkovski- Prosvetno delo AD- Skopje 2001
  2. стр.259 - 260 За македонскиот литературен јазик, Блаже Конески, Култура- Скопје 1967
  3. стр.259 За македонскиот литературен јазик, Блаже Конески, Култура- Скопје 1967
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.