The Soča dialect has pitch accent on long syllables, which are differentiated from short syllables. The southern microdialects have retained the Alpine Slovene accentuation, whereas the northern microdialects have undergone the *ženȁ → *žèna and *məglȁ → *mə̀gla accent shifts[4] under influence from the Gail Valley dialect.
Phonology
All long and later lengthened e-like vowels (*ě, *ę, *e) turned into iẹ, and o-like vowels (*ǫ, *o) turned into uo, except that final *ō turned into uː or into eː after *w. Secondarily stressed *e and *o in the northern microdialects turned into eː and oː, respectively, but oː changed into eː after *w. The vowels *ū, *ā, and *ī remained unchanged, and *ə̄ turned into aː. Syllabic *ł̥̄ turned into uː.[5]
Vowel reduction affected all vowels. Ukanye (*o, *ǫ → u) is common, as well as simplification of *e, *ě, *ę, *i, *u, and *a after the stress into e̥.[6]
Palatal consonants are only palatalized or completely hardened (depalatalized) (*ĺ → l’; *ń → n’/ń; ŕ → r; t’ → č/č́). *ĺ and *ń turned into the clusters lj and nj, respectively, before a vowel and *t’ turned into jč after stressed e. Before a front vowel, *w turned into ƀ (betacizem),[7] and elsewhere it remained. The consonant *g turned into ɣ and into voicedh at the end of a word or partially spirantized into ǥ. The consonants b and d also spirantized in some microdialects into ƀ and đ, respectively. Final consonants are not always devoiced; only b → p and d → θ/t. The consonant *t in the cluster tl and at the end of a word also turns into k. The consonant ǯ́ is present in loanwords, and in some dialects *f turned into x.[8][9][10]
Morphology
The Soča dialect retains neuter gender in all numbers and the dual still exists, but it is used inconsistently. The feminine dual l-participle form merged with the plural. The dialect uses the long infinitive. Verbs in -i- always have the accent on the root (ˈɣóːri vs. standard Slovene gorȋ 'to burn'), and with some reflexive verbs the accent in the imperative shifted to the end (uble̥ˈcìː se vs. standard Slovene oblẹ́ci se 'get dressed').[11]
Vocabulary
A dictionary of words used in the northern microdialects, particularly in Bovec, was written by Barbara Ivančič Kutin in 2007.[12]
References
↑Smole, Vera. 1998. "Slovenska narečja." Enciklopedija Slovenije vol. 12, pp. 1–5. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p. 2.
↑Toporišič, Jože. 1992. Enciklopedija slovenskega jezika. Ljubljana: Cankarjeva založba, p. 155.
↑Logar, Tine (1996). Kenda-Jež, Karmen (ed.). Dialektološke in jezikovnozgodovinske razprave[Dialectological and etymological discussions] (in Slovenian). Ljubljana: Znanstvenoraziskovalni center SAZU, Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša. p.32. ISBN961-6182-18-8.