The Teteven dialect is a Bulgarian dialect, which is part of the Balkan group of the Eastern Bulgarian dialects. It is spoken in the town of Teteven and several neighbouring villages and is almost completely surrounded by the Central Balkan dialect, except on the west where it borders on the Western Bulgarian Botevgrad dialect. The most significant feature of the dialect, as in all Balkan dialects, is the pronunciation of Old Church Slavonic ã (yat) as or , depending on the character of the following syllable.
Phonological and morphological characteristics
- The articulation of yat generally follows the Central Balkan dialect. However, the Teteven dialect features a much greater number of cases of articulation of than either the Balkan dialects or Standard Bulgarian, e.g. before ö , à, à, in one-syllable words and in certain verbs. This brings the Teteven dialect closer to certain Rup dialects: ÃÂõÃÂÃÂð vs. formal Bulgarian ÃÂõÃÂõÃÂð (cherry), üàvs. formal Bulgarian üõà(honey; Proto-Slavic üõôÃÂ, without yat)
- Articulation of Old Church Slavonic ë (yus) and àas broad õ () in a stressed syllable and as a slightly reduced a in an unstressed syllable, as in the Erkech dialect: ÷ÿ vs. formal ÷ÃÂÿ, ôðöô vs. formal ôÃÂöôÃÂÃÂ
- for Old Church Slavonic little yus (ç) with palatalisation of the preceding consonant: úûÃÂõÃÂòð vs. formal Bulgarian úûõÃÂòð (oath)
- Transition of a into e only after a soft (palatal) consonant and àbut not before ö and à(cf. Balkan dialects)
- Vocalic r and l for Old Church Slavonic ÃÂÃÂ/ÃÂàand ûÃÂ/ûàas in the Northwestern Bulgarian dialects instead of the combinations ÃÂÃÂ/ÃÂà(~) and ûÃÂ/ÃÂû (~) in Standard Bulgarian - ôÃÂòþ, ÃÂû÷ð instead of ôÃÂÃÂòþ, ÃÂÃÂû÷ð (tree, tear)
- The masculine definite article is broad õ () in a stressed syllable and as a slightly reduced a in an unstressed syllable: ôðö'ô vs. formal Bulgarian ôÃÂö'ôÃÂÃÂ
- Ending e instead of formal Bulgarian i for plural past active aorist participles (ñøûõ instead of ñøûø), as in the Northwestern Bulgarian dialects
- Ending e instead of formal Bulgarian i for multi-syllable masculine nouns (ñÃÂûóðÃÂõ instead of ñÃÂûóðÃÂø)
Most of the other phonological and morphological characteristics of the Erkech dialect are similar to the general features typical for all Balkan dialects, cf. article for details.
Sources
áÃÂþùúþò, áÃÂþùúþ: ÃÂÃÂûóðÃÂÃÂúð ôøðûõúÃÂþûþóøÃÂ, ÃÂúðô. ø÷ô. "ÃÂÃÂþÃÂ. ÃÂðÃÂøý ÃÂÃÂøýþò", 2006 http://www.promacedonia.org/jchorb/st/st_2_b_izt_2.htm#tetevenski
References