The Central Greater Poland dialect () belongs to the Greater Poland dialect group and is located in the part of Poland. It borders the Northern Greater Poland dialect to the north, the Western Greater Poland dialect to the west, the Eastern Greater Poland dialect to the east, the Southern Greater Poland dialect to the south, and the Lesser Polish Sieradz dialect to the southeast. The subdialect of these villages is increasingly affected by Standard Polish, as demonstrated by the number of similar features.
Typical of Greater Polish dialects, voicing of word-final consonants before vowels and liquids is present here. Also typical of Greater Polish dialects, mazuration is also not present.
Final -ej is sometimes realized as -ij/-yj or -i/-y, and -aj as -ej. Like many Greater Polish dialects, monothongs were often diphthongized: myjszyj (myszy), however, this is now rare. A few words show a vowel shift of -eà Â- > -oà Â-: widoà Âki (wideà Âki), and some words do not see an ablauted e: mietà Âa (miotà Âa).
Slanted é often raises to i (after both hard and soft consonants) and to y (particularly after hard consonants). Slanted ó is retained ó. Slanted á raises to o.
Nasal àand àdecompose word-medially to -iN-, -yN- and -oN-, -óN-. Word final -àdenasalizes to -e, and word-final -àis typically realized as -om, -óm.
Word-initial o- often labializes to ô-.
Many simplifications of clusters are present: tero (teraz), jes (jest), wszysko (wszystko). Often à  is lost when next to u: pótory (póà Âtory) or intervocalically: byoáµ (byà Âo). A common shift of trz, drz>czsz, dà ¼à ¼>cz, dà ¼, strz, zdrz>szczsz, à ¼dà ¼à ¼>szcz, à ¼dà ¼ is present. ch in some positions, especially weak positions, can be realized as k: skà Âa (schà Âa). Doubled consonants are simplified into a single one.
Non-contracted forms can be found: stojaà Ây (staà Ây).
The inflectional tendencies of this dialect are typical of other Greater Polish dialects.
A few nouns differ in gender from Standard Polish. Mobile e is sometimes not lost in declensions in certain declensions: myndele (myndle). -ów is usually used as the genitive plural ending, regardless of gender. The instrumental plural ending -mi is often levelled to -ami: koà Âmi (koniami).
The feminine genitive/locative singular and comparative of adverbs may be -y/- instead of -ej as a result of sound changes.
The second person singular imperative may be -ej instead of -aj as a result of sound changes. -ià Â/-yà  of past tense endings shift to -uà Â. The past tense is sometimes formed without the personal clitics: my musieli (musielià Âmy).
The prepositions w and z are extended to we and ze if the following word begins with w or z.
The word formation process of this dialect are typical of Greater Polish dialects.
Common noun-forming suffixes include: -acz/-aczka, -ak/-ok, -arka, -arnia, -arz, -aty/-yty, -ec, -ek, -ik/-yk, -ica, -icha, -isko/-ysko, -nik, -ówka, and -ówa.
Some adjectives are formed with -anny instead of standard -any. In à ÂowÃÂcin particularly, some numeral prefixes are used without an interfix/in non-declined forms: cztyryskibowy (czteroskibowy), pià ÂÃÂskibowy (piÃÂcioskibowy).