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Balkan sprachbund









Balkan sprachbund


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The Balkan Sprachbund or Balkan language area is the ensemble of areal features—similarities in grammar, syntax, vocabulary and phonology—among the languages of the Balkans. Several features are found across these languages though not all apply to every single language. The languages in question may belong to various separate branches of Indo-European (such as Slavic, Greek, Romance, Albanian and Indo-Aryan) or even outside of Indo-European (such as Turkish). Some of the languages use these features for their standard language (i.e. those whose homeland lies almost entirely within the region) whilst other populations to whom the land is not a cultural pivot (as they have wider communities outside of it) may still adopt the features for their local register.


While some of these languages may share little vocabulary, their grammars have very extensive similarities; for example they have similar case systems, in those that have preserved grammatical case and verb conjugation systems and have all become more analytic, although to differing degrees.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Languages


  • 3 Origins


    • 3.1 Thracian, Illyrian or Dacian and Albanian as successive language


    • 3.2 Greek


    • 3.3 Latin and Romance


    • 3.4 Multiple sources




  • 4 Features


    • 4.1 Grammatical features


      • 4.1.1 Case system


        • 4.1.1.1 Syncretism of genitive and dative


        • 4.1.1.2 Syncretism of locative and directional expressions




      • 4.1.2 Verb tenses


        • 4.1.2.1 Future tense


        • 4.1.2.2 Analytic perfect tense


        • 4.1.2.3 Renarrative mood


        • 4.1.2.4 Avoidance or loss of infinitive




      • 4.1.3 Bare subjunctive constructions


      • 4.1.4 Morphology


        • 4.1.4.1 Postposed article


        • 4.1.4.2 Numeral formation


        • 4.1.4.3 Clitic pronouns


        • 4.1.4.4 Adjectives


        • 4.1.4.5 Suffixes






    • 4.2 Vocabulary


      • 4.2.1 Loanwords


      • 4.2.2 Calques




    • 4.3 Phonetics




  • 5 See also


  • 6 Notes


  • 7 References


  • 8 Further reading





History[edit]


The earliest scholar to notice the similarities between Balkan languages belonging to different families was the Slovenian scholar Jernej Kopitar in 1829.[1]August Schleicher (1850)[2] more explicitly developed the concept of areal relationships as opposed to genetic ones, and Franz Miklosich (1861)[3] studied the relationships of Balkan Slavic and Romance more extensively.


Nikolai Trubetzkoy (1923),[4]Kristian Sandfeld-Jensen (1926),[5] and Gustav Weigand (1925, 1928)[6] developed the theory in the 1920s and 1930s.


In the 1930s, the Romanian linguist Alexandru Graur criticized the notion of “Balkan linguistics,” saying that one can talk about “relationships of borrowings, of influences, but not about Balkan linguistics”.[7]


The term "Balkan language area" was coined by the Romanian linguist Alexandru Rosetti in 1958, when he claimed that the shared features conferred the Balkan languages a special similarity. Theodor Capidan went further, claiming that the structure of Balkan languages could be reduced to a standard language. Many of the earliest reports on this theory were in German, hence the term "Balkansprachbund" is often used as well.



Languages[edit]


The languages that share these similarities belong to five distinct branches of the Indo-European languages:



  • Albanian


  • Hellenic (Greek)


  • Romance (Romanian, Aromanian, Megleno-Romance and Istro-Romanian)


  • Slavic (Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbo-Croatian—largely the Torlakian dialects of Serbian, which are transitional between the three, rather than Shtokavian, Kajkavian and Chakavian)


  • Indo-Aryan (Romani)


The Finnish linguist Jouko Lindstedt computed in 2000 a "Balkanization factor" which gives each Balkan language a score proportional with the number of features shared in the Balkan language area.[8] The results were:























Language
Score
Balkan Slavic
11.5
Albanian
10.5
Greek, Balkan Romance
9.5
Romani (Gypsy)
7.5

Another language that may have been influenced by the Balkan language union is the Judaeo-Spanish variant that used to be spoken by Sephardi Jews living in the Balkans. The grammatical features shared (especially regarding the tense system) were most likely borrowed from Greek.



Origins[edit]


The source of these features as well as the directions have long been debated, and various theories were suggested.



Thracian, Illyrian or Dacian and Albanian as successive language[edit]


Since most of these features cannot be found in languages related to those that belong to the language area (such as other Slavic or Romance languages),[dubious ] early researchers, including Kopitar, believed they must have been inherited from the Paleo-Balkan languages (e.g. Illyrian, Thracian and Dacian) which formed the substrate for modern Balkan languages. But since very little is known about Paleo-Balkan languages, it cannot be determined whether the features were present. The strongest candidate for a shared Paleo-Balkan feature is the postposed article. The Albanian language originates from one of these languages or possibly a mix of them[citation needed].



Greek[edit]


Another theory, advanced by Kristian Sandfeld in 1930, was that these features were an entirely Greek influence, under the presumption that since Greece "always had a superior civilization compared to its neighbours", Greek could not have borrowed its linguistic features from them. However, no ancient dialects of Greek possessed Balkanisms, so that the features shared with other regional languages appear to be post-classical innovations. Also, Greek appears to be only peripheral to the Balkan language area, lacking some important features, such as the postposed article. Nevertheless, several of the features that Greek does share with the other languages (loss of dative, replacement of infinitive by subjunctive constructions, object clitics, formation of future with auxiliary verb "to want") probably originated in Medieval Greek and spread to the other languages through Byzantine influence.[9]



Latin and Romance[edit]


The Roman Empire ruled all the Balkans, and local variation of Latin may have left its mark on all languages there, which were later the substrate to Slavic newcomers. This was proposed by Georg Solta. The weak point of this theory is that other Romance languages have few of the features, and there is no proof that the Balkan Romans were isolated for enough time to develop them. An argument for this would be the structural borrowings or "linguistic calques" into Macedonian from Aromanian, which could be explained by Aromanian being a substrate of Macedonian, but this still does not explain the origin of these innovations in Aromanian. The analytic perfect with the auxiliary verb "to have" (which some Balkan languages share with Western European languages), is the only feature whose origin can fairly safely be traced to Latin.[citation needed]



Multiple sources[edit]


The most commonly accepted theory, advanced by Polish scholar Zbigniew Gołąb, is that the innovations came from different sources and the languages influenced each other: some features can be traced from Latin, Slavic, or Greek languages, whereas others, particularly features that are shared only by Romanian, Albanian, Macedonian and Bulgarian, could be explained by the substratum kept after Romanization (in the case of Romanian) or Slavicization (in the case of Bulgarian). Albanian was influenced by both Latin and Slavic, but it kept many of its original characteristics.


Several arguments favour this theory. First, throughout the turbulent history of the Balkans, many groups of people moved to another place, inhabited by people of another ethnicity. These small groups were usually assimilated quickly and sometimes left marks in the new language they acquired. Second, the use of more than one language was common in the Balkans before the modern age, and a drift in one language would quickly spread to other languages. Third, the dialects that have the most "balkanisms" are those in regions where people had contact with people of many other languages.



Features[edit]



Grammatical features[edit]



Case system[edit]


The number of cases is reduced, several cases being replaced with prepositions, the only exception being Serbo-Croatian. In Bulgarian and Macedonian, on the other hand, this development has actually led to the loss of all cases except the vocative.


A common case system of a Balkan language is:



  • Nominative

  • Accusative


  • Dative / Genitive (merged)

  • Vocative



Syncretism of genitive and dative[edit]

In the Balkan languages, the genitive and dative cases (or corresponding prepositional constructions) undergo syncretism.


Example:















































Language
Dative
Genitive
English

I gave the book to Maria.

It is Maria's book.
Albanian

Librin ia dhashë Marisë.

Libri është i Marisë.
Aromanian

Vivlia lju dedu ali Marii.

Vivlia easti ali Marii.
Bulgarian

Дадох книгата на Мария
[dadoh knigata na Marija]

Книгата е на Мария
[knigata e na Marija]
Romanian

I-am dat cartea Mariei.
colloq. for fem. (oblig. for masc.):
I-am dat cartea lui Marian.

Cartea este a Mariei.
colloq. for fem. (oblig. for masc.):
Cartea este a lui Marian.
Macedonian

Ѝ ја дадов книгата на Марија.
[ì ja dadov knigata na Marija]

Книгата е на Марија.
[knigata e na Marija]

Greek



Έδωσα το βιβλίο στην Μαρία.
[édhosa to vivlío stin María]
     or
Έδωσα το βιβλίο της Μαρίας.
[édhosa to vivlío tis Marías]

Είναι το βιβλίο της Μαρίας.
[íne to vivlío tis Marías]

Της το έδωσα
[tis to édhosa]
'I gave it to her.'

Είναι το βιβλίο της.
[íne to vivlío tis]
'It is her book.'


Syncretism of locative and directional expressions[edit]





































language
"in Greece"
"into Greece"
Albanian

në Greqi

për/brenda në Greqi
Aromanian

tu Gârția; tu Grecu

tu Gârția; tu Grecu
Bulgarian

в Гърция (v Gărcija)

в Гърция (v Gărcija)
Greek

στην Ελλάδα (stin Elládha)

στην Ελλάδα (stin Elládha)
Macedonian

во Грција (vo Grcija)

во Грција (vo Grcija)
Romanian*

în Grecia

în Grecia

Note: In Romanian this is an exception, and it only applies when referring to individual countries, e.g. în Germania, în Franța, etc. The rule is that into translates as ”la” when trying to express destination, e.g. la Atena, la Madrid, la vale, la mare, etc but even in this case the same preposition is used to express direction and location.



Verb tenses[edit]



Future tense[edit]

The future tense is formed in an analytic way using an auxiliary verb or particle with the meaning "will, want", referred to as de-volitive, similar to the way the future is formed in English. This feature is present to varying degrees in each language. Decategoralization is less advanced in fossilized literary Romanian voi and in Serbo-Croatian ću, ćeš, će, where the future marker is still an inflected auxiliary. In modern Greek, Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Albanian, Aromanian, and spoken Romanian, decategoralization and erosion have given rise to an uninflected tense form, where the frozen third-person singular of the verb has turned into an invariable particle followed by the main verb inflected for person (compare Rom 1.sg. voi, 2.sg. vei, 3.sg. va > invariable va > mod. o).[10] Certain Torlakian dialects also have an invariant future tense marker in the form of the proclitic third-person-singular present form of the verb 'to want': će vidim (ће видим) 'I will see', će vidiš (ће видиш) "you will see", će vidi (ће види) 'he/she/it will see'.


















































































Language
Variant
Formation
Example: "I'll see"
Albanian
Tosk

do (invariable) + subjunctive

Do të shoh
Gheg

kam (conjugated) + infinitive

Kam me pa
Aromanian


va / u (inv.) + subjunctive

Va s'vedu / u s'vedu
Greek


θα (inv.) + subjunctive

Θα δω / βλέπω (tha dho / vlépo); "I'll see / be seeing"
Bulgarian


ще (inv.) + present tense

Ще видя (shte vidya)
Macedonian


ќе (inv.) + present tense

Ќе видам (kje vidam)
Serbian
(standard Serbian)

хтети / hteti (conjugated) + infinitive

Ја ћу видети (видећу) (ja ću videti [videću])
(colloquial Serbian)

хтети / hteti (conjugated) + subjunctive

Ја ћу да видим (ja ću da vidim)
Romanian
(literary, formal)

voi, vei, va, vom, veți, vor + infinitive

Voi vedea
(archaic)

va (inv.) + subjunctive

Va să văd
(modern)

o (inv.) + subjunctive

O să văd
(colloquial alternative)

a avea (conjugated) + subjunctive

Am să văd
Romani
(Erli)[11]

ka (inv.) + subjunctive

Ka dikhav


Analytic perfect tense[edit]

The analytic perfect tense is formed in the Balkan languages with the verb "to have" and, usually, a past passive participle, similarly to the construction found in Germanic and other Romance languages: e.g. Romanian am promis "I have promised", Albanian kam premtuar "I have promised". A somewhat less typical case of this is Greek, where the verb "to have" is followed by the so-called απαρέμφατο ('invariant form', historically the aorist infinitive): έχω υποσχεθεί. However, a completely different construction is used in Bulgarian and Serbo-Croatian, which have inherited from Common Slavic an analytic perfect formed with the verb "to be" and the past active participle: обещал съм, obeštal sǎm (Bul.) / обећао сам, obećao sam (Ser.) - "I have promised" (lit. "I am having-promised"). On the other hand, Macedonian, the third Slavic language in the sprachbund, is like Romanian and Albanian in that it uses quite typical Balkan constructions consisting of the verb to have and a past passive participle (имам ветено, imam veteno = "I have promised"). Macedonian also has a perfect formed with the verb "to be", like Bulgarian and Serbo-Croatian.



Renarrative mood[edit]

The so-called renarrative mood is another shared feature of the Balkan languages, including Turkish. It is used for statements that are not based on direct observation or common knowledge, but repeat what was reported by others. For example, Патот бил затворен in Macedonian means "The road was closed (or so I heard)". A speaker who uses the indicative mood instead and states "Патот беше затворен" implies thereby that they personally witnessed the road's closure.



Avoidance or loss of infinitive[edit]

The use of the infinitive (common in other languages related to some of the Balkan languages, such as Romance and Slavic) is generally replaced with subjunctive constructions, following early Greek innovation.



  • in Bulgarian, Macedonian and Tosk Albanian, the loss of the infinitive is complete

  • in demotic (vernacular) Greek, the loss of the infinitive was complete, whereas in literary Greek (Katharevousa, abolished in 1976) it was not; the natural fusion of the vernacular with Katharevousa resulted in the creation of the contemporary common Greek (Modern Standard Greek), where the infinitive, when used, is principally used as noun (e.g. λέγειν "speaking, fluency, eloquence", γράφειν "writing", είναι "being", etc.) deriving directly from the ancient Greek infinitive formation. But its substitution by the subjunctive form when the infinitive would be used as a verb is complete. Most of the times, the subjunctive form substitutes the infinitive also in the cases when it would be used as a noun (e.g. το να πας / το να πάει κανείς "to go, the act of going", το να δεις / βλέπεις "to see/be seeing, the act of seeing" instead of the infinitive "βλέπειν", etc.)

  • in Aromanian and Southern Serbo-Croatian dialects, it is almost complete

  • in Gheg Albanian and Megleno-Romanian, it is used only in a limited number of expressions

  • in standard Romanian (prepositional phrase: a + verb stem) and Serbo-Croatian, the infinitive shares many of its functions with the subjunctive. In these two languages, the infinitive will always be found in dictionaries and language textbooks. However, in Romanian, the inherited infinitive form (-are, -ere, and -ire) is now used only as a verbal noun.

  • Turkish as spoken in Sliven and Šumen has also almost completely lost the infinitive, but not verbal nouns using the same grammatical form. This is clearly due to the influence of the Balkan sprachbund.


For example, "I want to write" in several Balkan languages:





















































Language
Example
Notes
Albanian

Dua të shkruaj
as opposed to Gheg me fjet "to sleep" or me hangër "to eat"
Aromanian

Vroi să scriu / ăngrăpsescu

Macedonian

Сакам да пишувам [sakam da pišuvam]

Bulgarian

Искам да пиша [iskam da piša]

Modern Greek

Θέλω να γράψω [Thélo na grápso]
as opposed to older Greek ἐθέλω γράψαι
Romanian

Vreau să scriu (with subjunctive)


Vreau a scrie (with infinitive)


The use of the infinitive is preferred in writing in some cases only. In speech it is more commonly used in the northern varieties (Transylvania, Banat, and Moldova) than in Southern varieties (Wallachia) of the language.[12] The most common form is still the form with subjunctive.
Serbian

Želim da pišem / Желим да пишем
As opposed to the more literary form: Želim pisati / Желим пиcaти, where pisati / пиcaти is the infinitive. Both forms are grammatically correct in standard Serbian and do not create misunderstandings, although the colloquial one is more commonly used in daily conversation.
Bulgarian Turkish

isterim yazayım
In Standard Turkish in Turkey this is yazmak istiyorum where yazmak is the infinitive.
Romani (Erli)

Mangav te pišinav
Many forms of Romani add the ending -a to express the indicative present, while reserving the short form for the subjunctive serving as an infinitive: for example mangava te pišinav. Some varieties outside the Balkans have been influenced by non-Balkan languages and have developed new infinitives by generalizing one of the finite forms (e.g. Slovak Romani varieties may express "I want to write" as kamav te irinel/pisinel — generalized third person singular — or kamav te irinen/pisinen — generalized third person plural).

But here is an example of a relict form, preserved in Bulgarian:





































Language
Without infinitive
With relict "infinitive"
Translation
Notes
Bulgarian

Недей да пишеш.

Недей писа.
Don't write.
The first part of the first three examples is the prohibitative element недей ("don't", composed of не, "not", and дей, "do" in the imperative). The second part of the examples, писа, я, зна and да, are relicts of what used to be an infinitive form (писати, ясти, знати and дати respectively). This second syntactic construction is colloquial and more common in the eastern dialects. The forms usually coincide with the past aorist tense of the verb in the third person singular, as in the case of писа; some that don't coincide (for example доща instead of ще дойда "I will come") are highly unusual today, but do occur, above all in older literature.

The last example is found only in some dialects.



Недей да ядеш.

Недей я.
Don't eat.

Недей да знаеш.

Недей зна.
Don't know.

Можете ли да ми дадете?

Можете ли ми да?
Can you give me?


Немой чете
Don't read


Bare subjunctive constructions[edit]


Sentences that include only a subjunctive construction can be used to express a wish, a mild command, an intention, or a suggestion.


This example translates in the Balkan languages the phrase "You should go!", using the subjunctive constructions.



















































Language
Example
Notes
Macedonian
Да (си) одиш!
"Оди" [odi] in the imperative is more common, and has the identical meaning.
Bulgarian
Да си ходиш!
"Ходи си!" [ho'di si] is the more common imperative.

Torlakian
Да идеш!
"Иди!" in the imperative is grammatically correct, and has the identical meaning.
Albanian
Të shkosh!
"Shko!" in the imperative is grammatically correct. "Të shkosh" is used in sentence only followed by a modal verbs, ex. in these cases: Ti duhet të shkosh (You should go), Ti mund të shkosh (You can go) etc.
Modern Greek
Να πας!

Romany (Gypsy)
Te dža!

Romanian
Să te duci!


  • compare with similar Spanish "¡Que te largues!"

  • in Romanian, the "a se duce" (to go) requires a reflexive construction, literally "take yourself (to)"


Meglenian
S-ti duts!
Aromanian
S-ti duts!


Morphology[edit]



Postposed article[edit]

With the exception of Greek, Serbo-Croatian, and Romani, all languages in the union have their definite article attached to the end of the noun, instead of before it. None of the related languages (like other Romance languages or Slavic languages) share this feature, with the notable exception of the northern Russian dialects, and it is thought to be an innovation created and spread in the Balkans.


However, each language created its own internal articles, so the Romanian articles are related to the articles (and demonstrative pronouns) in Italian, French, etc., whereas the Bulgarian articles are related to demonstrative pronouns in other Slavic languages.






































































Language
Feminine
Masculine
without

article


with

article


without

article


with

article


English
woman

the woman
man

the man
Albanian
grua
gruaja
burrë
burri
Aromanian
muljari
muljarea
bărbat
bărbatlu
Bulgarian
жена
жената
мъж
мъжът
Greek
γυναίκα

η γυναίκα
άντρας

ο άντρας
Macedonian[13]
жена
жената
маж
мажот
Romanian
femeie

muiere


femeia

muierea


bărbat
bărbatul

Torlakian
жена
жената
муж
мужът


Numeral formation[edit]

The Slavic way of composing the numbers between 10 and 20, e.g. "one + on + ten" for eleven, called superessive, is widespread. Greek does not follow this.






































Language
The word "Eleven"
compounds
Albanian
"njëmbëdhjetë"
një + mbë + dhjetë
Aromanian
"unsprădzatsi", commonly, " unspră"
un + spră + dzatsi
Bulgarian
"единадесет"
един + (н)а(д) + десет
Macedonian
"единаесет"
еде(и)н + (н)а(д) + (д)есет
Romanian
"unsprezece" or, more commonly, "unșpe"
un + spre + zece < *unu + supre + dece; unu + spre; the latter is more commonly used, even in formal speech.
Serbo-Croatian
"jedanaest/једанаест"
jedan+ (n)a+ (d)es(e)t/један + (н)а + (д)ес(е)т. This is not the case only with South Slavic languages. This word is formed in the same way in most Slavic languages, e.g. Polish - "jedenaście", Czech - "jedenáct", Slovak - "jedenásť", Russian - "одиннадцать", Ukrainian - "одинадцять", etc.


Clitic pronouns[edit]

Direct and indirect objects are cross-referenced, or doubled, in the verb phrase by a clitic (weak) pronoun, agreeing with the object in gender, number, and case or case function. This can be found in Romanian, Greek, Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Albanian. In Albanian and Macedonian, this feature shows fully grammaticalized structures and is obligatory with indirect objects and to some extent with definite direct objects; in Bulgarian, however, it is optional and therefore based on discourse. In Greek, the construction contrasts with the clitic-less construction and marks the cross-referenced object as a topic. Southwest Macedonia appears to be the location of innovation.


For example, "I see George" in Balkan languages:































Language
Example
Albanian
"E shoh Gjergjin"
Aromanian
"U- ved Yioryi"
Bulgarian
"Гледам го Георги."
Macedonian
"Гo гледам Ѓорѓи."
Greek
"Τον βλέπω τον Γιώργο"
Romanian
"Îl văd pe Gheorghe."

Note: The neutral case in normal (SVO) word order is without a clitic: "Гледам Георги." However, the form with an additional clitic pronoun is also perfectly normal and can be used for emphasis: "Гледам го Георги." And the clitic is obligatory in the case of a topicalized object (with OVS-word order), which serves also as the common colloquial equivalent of a passive construction. "Георги го гледам."



Adjectives[edit]

The replacement of synthetic adjectival comparative forms with analytic ones by means of preposed markers is common. These markers are:



  • Bulgarian: по-

  • Macedonian: по (prepended)

  • Albanian:

  • Romanian: mai

  • Modern Greek: πιο (pió)

  • Aromanian: (ca)ma


Macedonian and Modern Greek have retained some of the earlier synthetic forms. In Bulgarian and Macedonian these have become proper adjectives in their own right without the possibility of [further] comparison. This is more evident in Macedonian: виш = "higher, superior", ниж = "lower, inferior". Compare with similar structures in Bulgarian: висш(-(ия(т))/а(та)/о(то)/и(те)) = "(the) higher, (the) superior" (по-висш(-(ия(т))/а(та)/о(то)/и(те)) = "(the) [more] higher, (the) [more] superior"; 'най-висш(-(ия(т))/о(то)/а(та)/и(те))' = "(the) ([most]) highest, supreme"; нисш (also spelled as низш sometimes) = "low, lower, inferior", it can also possess further comparative or superlative as with 'висш' above.



Suffixes[edit]

Also, some common suffixes can be found in the language area, such as the diminutive suffix of the Slavic languages (Srb. Bul. Mac.) "-ovo" "-ica" that can be found in Albanian, Greek and Romanian.



Vocabulary[edit]



Loanwords[edit]


Several hundred words are common to the Balkan union languages; the origin of most of them is either Greek, Bulgarian or Turkish, as the Byzantine Empire, the First Bulgarian Empire, the Second Bulgarian Empire and later the Ottoman Empire directly controlled the territory throughout most of its history, strongly influencing its culture and economics.


Albanian, Aromanian, Bulgarian, Greek, Romanian, Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian also share a large number of words of various origins:

























































































































Source

Source word

Meaning
Albanian
Aromanian
Bulgarian
Greek
Romanian
Macedonian
Serbo-Croatian
Turkish
Vulgar Latin
mēsa
table
mësallë ‘dinner table; tablecloth’
measã
маса (masa)

masă
маса (masa)

masa
Thracian

romphea,
rumpīa
polearm

colloq. rrufe ‘lightning bolt’
rofélja

dial. руфия (rufiya) ‘thunderbolt’

anc. ρομφαία (rhomphaía)


colloq. ровја (rovja) and dial. рофја (rofja) ‘thunder’


Byzantine Greek
λιβάδιον (livádion)
meadow

colloq. livadh
livadhi
ливада (livada)
λιβάδι
livadă
ливада (livada)
livada
ливада (livada)

Byzantine Greek
διδάσκαλος (didáskalos)
teacher

obs. dhaskal/icë
dascal

colloq. даскал (daskal)
δάσκαλος

rare dascăl

colloq. даскал (daskal)

colloq. даскал (daskal)

Byzantine Greek
κουτίον
(koutíon)
box
kuti
cutii
кутия (kutiya)
κουτί
cutie
кутија (kutija)
kutija
кутија (kutija)
kutu
Slavic

*vydra
otter
vidër
vidrã
видра (vidra)
βίδρα (vídra)
vidră
видра (vidra)
видра (vidra)

Slavic

*kosa
scythe
kosë
coasã
коса (kosa)
κόσα (kósa)
coasă
коса (kosa)
коса (kosa)

Turkish
boya
paint, color

colloq. bojë
boi
боя (boya)
μπογιά (boyá)
boia
боја (boja)
boja
боја (boja)
boya


Calques[edit]


Apart from the direct loans, there are also many calques that were passed from one Balkan language to another, most of them between Albanian, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Greek, Aromanian and Romanian.


For example, the word "ripen" (as in fruit) is constructed in Albanian, Romanian and (rarely) in Greek (piqem, a (se) coace, ψήνομαι), in Turkish pişmek by a derivation from the word "to bake" (pjek, a coace, ψήνω).[14]


Another example is the wish "(∅/to/for) many years":





















































Language
Expression
Transliteration
Greek
(medieval)
εις έτη πολλά
is eti polla
(modern)
χρόνια πολλά
khronia polla
Latin
ad multos annos
 
Aromanian
ti mullts anj
 
Romanian
la mulți ani
 
Albanian
për shumë vjet
Bulgarian
за много години
za mnogo godini
Macedonian
за многу години
za mnogu godini
Serbo-Croatian
за много годинa
za mnogo godina

Idiomatic expressions for "whether one <verb> or not" are formed as "<verb>-not-<verb>".[15] "Whether one wants or not":












































Language
expression
transliteration
Bulgarian
ще - не ще
shte - ne shte
Greek

θέλει δε θέλει
theli de theli
Romanian
vrea nu vrea
Turkish
ister istemez
Serbo-Croatian
хтео - не хтео
hteo - ne hteo
Albanian
do - s'do
Macedonian
сакал - не сакал / нејќел
sakal - ne sakal / nejkjel
Aromanian
vrea - nu vrea

This is also present in other Slavic languages, eg. Polish chcąc nie chcąc.



Phonetics[edit]


The main phonological features consist of:



  • the presence of an unrounded central vowel, either a mid-central schwa /ə/ or a high central vowel phoneme


    • ë in Albanian; ъ in Bulgarian; ă in Romanian; ã in Aromanian

    • In Romanian and Albanian, the schwa is obtained via centralizing unstressed /a/
      • Example: Latin camisia "shirt" > Romanian cămașă /kə.ma.ʃə/, Albanian këmishë /kə.mi.ʃə/)


    • The schwa phoneme occurs across some dialects of the Macedonian language, but is absent in the standard.



  • some kind of umlaut in stressed syllables with differing patterns depending on the language.

    • Romanian:

      • a mid-back vowel ends in a low glide before a nonhigh vowel in the following syllable.

      • a central vowel is fronted before a front vowel in the following syllable.



    • Albanian: back vowels are fronted before i in the following syllable.



  • The presence of /v/ but not /w/


This feature[which?] also occurs in Greek, but it is lacking in some of the other Balkan languages; the central vowel is found in Romanian, Bulgarian, some dialects of Albanian, and Serbo-Croatian, but not in Greek or Standard Macedonian.


Less widespread features are confined largely to either Romanian or Albanian, or both:



  • frequent loss of l before i in Romanian and some Romani dialects

  • the alternation between n and r in Albanian and Romanian.

  • change from l to r in Romanian, Greek and very rarely in Bulgarian and Albanian.

  • the raising of o to u in unstressed syllables in Bulgarian, Romanian and Northern Greek dialects.

  • change from ea to e before i in Bulgarian and Romanian.



See also[edit]




  • Albanian grammar

  • Balkan languages

  • Bulgarian grammar

  • Greek grammar

  • Macedonian grammar

  • Paleo-Balkan languages

  • Serbo-Croatian grammar

  • Turkish grammar




Notes[edit]





  1. ^ Kopitar, Jernej K. (1829). "Albanische, walachische und bulgarische Sprache". Jahrbücher der Literatur (Wien). 46: 59–106. ISBN 3-89131-038-2..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ August Schleicher, Linguistische Untersuchungen, vol. 2: Die Sprachen Europas in systematischer Übersicht. Bonn: H. B. König, 1850.


  3. ^ Miklosich, F. (1861). "Die slavischen Elemente im Rumunischen". Denkschriften der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-historische Classe. 12: 1–70.


  4. ^ Trubetzkoy, N.S. (1923). "Vavilonskaja bašnja i smešenie jazykov". Evrazijskij vremennik. 3: 107–24.


  5. ^ K. Sandfeld, Balkanfilologien: En oversigt over dens resultater og problemer. Copenhagen: Lunp, 1926; translated into French as Linguistique balkanique: problèmes et résultats. Paris: Champion, 1930.


  6. ^ Weigand, Gustav (1925). "Vorwort, zugleich Programm des Balkan-Archivs". Balkan-Archiv. 1: V–XV.; Gustav Weigand, “Texte zur vergleichenden Syuntax der Balkansprachen”, Balkan Archiv IV (1928): 53-70.


  7. ^ Chase Faucheux, Language Classification and Manipulation in Romania and Moldova, M.A. thesis, Louisiana State University, 2006 quoting André Du Nay, The Origins of the Rumanians: The Early History of the Rumanian Language, 1996.


  8. ^ Lindstedt, J. (2000). "Linguistic Balkanization: Contact-induced change by mutual reinforcement". In D. G. Gilbers; et al. Languages in Contact. Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics, 28. Amsterdam & Atlanta, GA: Rodopi. pp. 231–246. ISBN 90-420-1322-2.


  9. ^ Horrocks, Geoffrey (2010). Greek: A History of the Language and its Speakers (2nd ed.). Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 227–229.


  10. ^ Bernd Heine & Tania Kuteva, Language Contact and Grammatical Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).


  11. ^ Romani dialects outside of the Balkans generally do not express the future tense in this way. Unlike the avoidance of the infinitive, which had already come to encompass all Romani varieties before many of them were brought out of the Balkans into the rest of Europe, the formation of the future tense with a devolitive particle is apparently a later development, since it is only seen in those dialect groups that have not left the Balkans.


  12. ^ Mădălina Spătaru-Pralea. "Concurența infinitiv-conjunctiv în limba română". Retrieved 2011-06-26.
    [permanent dead link]



  13. ^ In Macedonian there are three types of definite articles. In this example the common definite article is given.


  14. ^ In Greek, usually in the mediopassive voice, and applicable not only to fruits but other natural products: Babiniotis, Λεξικό της νέας Ελληνικής Γλώσσας (1998), gives the example "φέτος ψήθηκαν νωρίς τα καλαμπόκια".


  15. ^ Winford, Donald (2003). An Introduction to Contact Linguistics. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-21251-5.




References[edit]




  • Batzarov, Zdravko. "Balkan Linguistic Union". Encyclopædia Orbis Latini.

  • André Du Nay, The Origins of the Rumanians: The Early History of the Rumanian Language, 2nd edn. Toronto–Buffalo, NY: Matthias Corvinus, 1996 (1st edn., 1977), pp. 85-87, 88-97, 190.

  • Victor A. Friedman, "After 170 years of Balkan Linguistics: Whither the Millennium?", Mediterranean Language Review 12:1-15, 2000.PDF—an excellent survey article

  • Victor A. Friedman, “Balkans as a Linguistic Area”, Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World, eds. Keith Brown & Sarah Ogilvie (Elsevier, 2009), 119-134.


  • Joseph, Brian D. (1999). "Romanian and the Balkans: Some Comparative Perspectives" (PDF).

  • Christina E. Kramer, “The Grammaticalization of the Future Tense Auxiliary in the Balkan Languages”, Indiana Slavic Studies 7 (1994): 127–35.

  • Alexandru Rosetti, B. Cazacu, & I. Coteanu, eds. Istoria limbii române [History of the Romanian language], 2 vols. Bucharest: Edit. Acad. RSR, 1965 (vol.1), 1969 (vol. 2); 2nd edn., 1978.

  • Ion Russu, Limba Traco-Dacilor [The Language of the Thraco-Dacians]. Bucharest: Editura Științifică, 1967.

  • Klaus Steinke & Ariton Vraciu, Introducere în lingvistica balcanică [An Introduction to Balkan Linguistics]. Iași: Editura Universității “Alexandru Ioan Cuza”, 1999.


  • Thomason, Sarah G. (1999). "Linguistic areas and language history" (PDF).

  • Sarah G. Thomason, Language Contact: An Introduction. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2001, pp. 105–10.


  • Tomić, Olga Mišeska (2003). "The Balkan Sprachbund properties: An introduction to Topics in Balkan Syntax and Semantics" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2003-09-11.


  • Olga Mišeska Tomić (2006). Balkan sprachbund morpho-syntactic features. Dordrecht: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4020-4487-8.


  • Andrej N. Sobolev, ed. Malyi dialektologiceskii atlas balkanskikh iazykov. Munich: Biblion Verlag, 2003-


  • Andrej N. Sobolev, “Antibalkanismy”, Južnoslovenski filolog (2011) PDF[permanent dead link]



Further reading[edit]


General


  • Jack Feuillet. “Aire linguistique balkanique”, Language Typology and Language Universals: An International Handbook, vol. 2, eds. Martin Haspelmath, Ekkehard König, Wulf Oesterreicher, & Wolfgang Raible. NY: Walter de Gruyter, 2001, pp. 1510–28.


  • Victor A. Friedman. “Balkans as a Linguistic Area”, Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd edn., ed. Keith Brown. Oxford: Elsevier, 2005, pp. 657–72.

  • Brian D. Joseph. “Balkan Languages”, International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, 4 vols., ed. William Bright. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992, 1: 153–55.

  • Brian D. Joseph. “Language Contact in the Balkans”, The Handbook of Language Contact, ed. Raymond Hickey. Malden, MA–Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010, pp. 618–33.

  • Olga Mišeska Tomić. “Balkan Sprachbund features”, The Languages and Linguistics of Europe: A Comprehensive Guide, eds. Bernd Kortmann & Johan van der Auwera. Berlin–Boston: Walter de Gruyter, 2011, pp. 307–24.


Overviews


  • Helmut Wilhelm Schaller. Die Balkansprachen: Eine Einführung in die Balkanphilologie. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag C. Winter, 1975.

  • Harald Haarmann. Balkanlinguistik. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag, 1978.

  • Georg Renatus Solta. Einführung in die Balkanlinguistik mit besonderer Berücksichtigung des Substrats und des Balkanlateinischen. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1980.

  • G. A. Cyxun. Tipologičeskie problemy balkanoslavjanskogo jazykovogo areala. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo “Nauka i texnika”, 1981.

  • Emanuele Banfi. Linguistica balcanica. Bologna: Zanichelli, 1985.

  • Jack Feuillet. La linguistique balkanique. Paris: INALCO, 1986.

  • Agnija Desnickaja. Osnovy balkanskogo jazykoznanija. Leningrad: Nauka, 1990.


  • Shaban Demiraj. Gjuhësi balkanike [Balkan Linguistics]. Skopje: Logos-A., 1994.

  • Norbert Reiter. Grundzüge der Balkanologie: Ein Schritt in die Eurolinguistik. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1994.

  • Klaus Steinke & Ariton Vraciu. Introducere în lingvistica balcanică [An Introduction to Balkan Linguistics]. Iași: Editura Universității “Alexandru Ioan Cuza”, 1999.

  • Uwe Hinrichs, ed. Handbuch der Südosteuropa-Linguistik. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1999.

  • Petja Asenova. Balkansko ezikoznanie: Osnovni problemi na balkanskija ezikov sŭjuz. Veliko Tărnovo: Faber, 2002.

  • Victor Friedman. “Balkan Slavic dialectology and Balkan linguistics: Periphery as center”, American contributions to the 14th International Congress of Slavists, Ohrid, September 2008, ed. Christina Yurkiw Bethin & David M. Bethea. Bloomington, IN: Slavica, 2008, pp. 131–48.

  • Victor Friedman. “The Balkan languages and Balkan linguistics”, Annual Review of Anthropology 40 (2011): 275–91.


History


  • Petja Asenova. “Aperçu historique des études dans le domaine de la linguistique balkanique”, Balkansko ezikoznanie 22, no. 1 (1979): 5–45.

  • Brian D. Joseph. “On the Need for History in Balkan Linguistics”, Kenneth E. Naylor Memorial Lecture Series, vol. 10. Ann Arbor, MI: Beech Stave, 2008.


Balkanisms


  • Howard I. Aronson. “Towards a Typology of the Balkan Future”, Indiana Slavic Studies 7 (1994): 9–18.

  • Howard I. Aronson. The Balkan Linguistic League, “Orientalism”, and Linguistic Typology. Ann Arbor, MI–NY: Beech Stave, 2006.

  • Bridget Drinka. “The Balkan Perfects: Grammaticalizion and Contact”, Language Contact in Europe: The Periphrastic Perfect through History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017, pp. 267–87.

  • Victor A. Friedman. “The Typology of Balkan Evidentiality and Areal Linguistics”, Balkan Syntax and Semantics, ed. Olga Mišeska Tomić. Amsterdam–Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2004, pp. 101–135.

  • Brian D. Joseph. The Synchrony and Diachrony of the Balkan Infinitive: A Study in Areal, General, and Historical Linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983 (reprint 2009).

  • Dalina Kallulli & Liliane Tasmowski, eds. Clitic Doubling in the Balkan Languages. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2008.

  • Christina E. Kramer. “The Grammaticalization of the Future Tense Auxiliary in the Balkan Languages”, Indiana Slavic Studies 7 (1994): 127–35.

  • Christina E. Kramer. “Negation and the Grammaticalization of Have and Want Futures in Bulgarian and Macedonian”, Canadian Slavonic Papers/Revue Canadienne des Slavistes 39, no. 3–4 (1997): 407–16.

  • Maria-Luisa Rivero & Angela Ralli, eds. Comparative Syntax of the Balkan Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.

  • Zuzanna Topolińska. “The Balkan Sprachbund from a Slavic perspective”, Zbornik Matice srpske za filologiju i lingvistiku 53, no. 1 (2010): 33–60.






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