Central Chakavian
Central Chakavian | |
---|---|
srednječakavski dijalekt | |
Indo-European
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | None |
Central Chakavian (also translated as Middle Chakavian; Croatian: srednječakavski dijalekt) is a dialect of the Chakavian variety of Croatian. It is spoken on the islands Dugi, Kornati, Lošinj, Krk, Rab, Ugljan (except the southernmost Southern Chakavian village of Kukljica, exhibiting many shared features with Ugljan's otherwise Central Chakavian dialects) Pag, on the land the cities of Vinodol, Ogulin, Brinje, Otočac, the area around Duga Resa, part of Central and Northeastern Istria (including Čičarija dialect in Slovenian part), and Municipality of Kostanjevica na Krki (Oštrc, Črešnjevec pri Oštrcu, Črneča Vas, Vrtača, Vrbje) in Slovenia.[1]
This dialect is peculiar for its mixed Ikavian–Ekavian reflex of Common Slavic yat vowel, which was governed by Meyer–Jakubinskij's law.
References
- ^ Lisac, Josip (2009). "Srednjočakavski dijalekt". Hrvatska Dijalektologija 2. Čakavsko narječje [Croatian Dialectology 2: Chakavian dialect] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Golden Marketing-Tehnička knjiga. pp. 95–96. ISBN 9789532121698.
- Dalibor Brozović (1988). Čakavsko narječje; Jezik srpskohrvatski / hrvatskosrpski, hrvatski ili srpski (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb: JLZ Miroslav Krleža. ISBN 953-0-30225-8.
- CS1 Croatian-language sources (hr)
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- Articles containing Croatian-language text
- Languages without Glottolog code
- Dialects of languages with ISO 639-3 code
- Dialect articles with speakers set to 'unknown'
- CS1 Serbo-Croatian-language sources (sh)
- Croatian dialects
- Dialects of Serbo-Croatian