The South White Carniolan dialect ( , , ) is a Slovene dialect heavily influenced by Shtokavian dialects. It is spoken in southern White Carniola, south of DobliÃÂe and Griblje. However, it is not spoken in all the settlements in that area because some are almost completely inhabited by immigrants, and so Shtokavian heavily influenced by Slovene is instead spoken there. The dialect borders the North White Carniolan dialect to the north, the Prigorje dialect to the east, Central Chakavian to southeast, the Eastern Goran dialect to the south, the Kostel dialect to the southwest, and the mixed KoÃÂevje subdialects to the northwest, as well as those mixed Shtokavian dialects. The dialect belongs to the Lower Carniolan dialect group, and it evolved from the Lower Carniolan dialect base.
The border between the South and North White Carniolan dialects is rather clear; it was already defined by Tine Logar. It follows the line from Jelà ¡evnik to Krasinec, but it runs a bit south of ÃÂrnomelj. The border with the mixed KoÃÂevje subdialects is a bit more questionable because both dialects are poorly researched and an accurate border cannot be drawn. The border with the Kostel dialect is also probably wrong because the Kostel dialect extends along the Kolpa River in Croatia, but (as marked on the map) not on Slovene side, and so the Kostel dialect might actually be spoken there. The border with the Shtokavian dialects is even more blurred. The villages of Bojanci, Marindol, MiliÃÂi, and PaunoviÃÂi are mainly inhabited by Serbs, and so Shtokavian is spoken there, whereas speakers in neighboring villages such as Preloka and Adleà ¡iÃÂi were already thought to speak a Slovene dialect by Tine Logar. He also noted that an ikavian dialect is spoken in TribuÃÂe.
According to what is known today, the dialect ranges from Adleà ¡iÃÂi and Preloka north to Krasinec, west to the KoÃÂevje Rog Plateau and along the Kolpa River at least to Stari Trg ob Kolpi, apart from the aforementioned Serbian villages. To the south and east, it is currently thought that the SloveniaâÂÂCroatia border is also the dialect border.
White Carniola was inhabited by Slovenes after the 13th century, and even then it was rather remote from other Slovenes on the KoÃÂevje Rog Plateau to the west and in the Gorjanci Mountains to the north. The immigration of the Gottschee Germans left the Slovenes even more closely connected to Croatia. However, they, still maintained contact with other Slovenes that lived on the other side of the Gorjanci Mountains to the north. Differentiation between the North and South White Carniolan dialects occurred in the 15th and 16th centuries, when the Ottomans started attacking Bosnia and Dalmatia. Because of that, White Carniolans started moving north of the Gorjanci Mountains, while the mostly cleared region of southern White Carniola, especially along Kolpa River, was newly inhabited by immigrants from Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Croatia. The White Carniolan dialect then formed from a mix of the old White Carniolan dialect, Serbo-Croatian dialects, and dialects from newly settled Slovenes after the Ottoman invasions. Serbo-Croatian influence was the most prominent in the south, whereas in the north it had negligible influence. Therefore, today the White Carniolan dialect is split based on how much influence it received from Serbo-Croatian.
The South White Carniolan microdialects west of Vinica and Dragatuà ¡ retained pitch accent on long syllables, which was lost in the eastern microdialects. The long neoacute on the final syllables became a circumflex ( â ). Long and short syllables are still differentiated. It also underwent the same six accentual changes as the North White Carniolan dialect: â , â , / â / , â , and â , but the southern microdialects have also partially undergone the accent shift â . The northern microdialects (Dragatuà ¡, DobliÃÂe) have not undergone the â shift, and the western microdialects have not fully undergone the / â / accent shift.
The phonological characteristics of the dialect are not characteristic for Slovene dialects, and some changes occurred that are known for Serbo-Croatian, but not for Slovene. The dialect is one of the most diverse and understudied dialects, mainly because of Serbo-Croatian influence.
Alpine Slovene has evolved into in the north, in Vinica and Preloka (in the southern part), / in Stari Trg (in the west), and elsewhere. The evolution is confusing because in Zilje, a village between Vinica and Preloka, the pronunciation is , not , and in Predgrad, which is even further west than Stari Trg, the pronunciation is also . The vowel mostly evolved into . In the east, it evolved into and into / in the west.
The vowel evolved into in the north and west, in the south, and in the east. Nasal evolved into in the northernmost microdialects and in the south, and into in the middle (Dragatuà ¡) and east. It evolved into in Zilje and Bedenj.
The vowel mostly remained . In DobliÃÂe and Dragatuà ¡, is also present, and in the west it evolved into . Alpine Slavic evolved into .
Long old acute vowels and the short neoacute (those after accent shifts) became short; this is a feature of Serbo-Croatian dialects, and so this was probably influenced by the immigrants:
Alpine Slovene turned into , turned into in the northern, eastern, and southern microdialects, and into in the western microdialects. If a word started with , appeared before it. In the western dialects, turned into . Palatal , , , and remain palatal, except in the northern and eastern dialects, where they become only palatalized. Another feature is that only the northern microdialects devoice non-sonorants before the end of a word; elsewhere they remain voiced. In Zapudje, final devoices into .
The instrumental plural was replaced by locative plural forms in the eastern dialects.