Paulician Dialect
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The Paulician dialect () is a Bulgarian dialect of the Rhodopean group of the Rup dialects. The Paulician dialect is spoken by some 40,000 people, nearly all of them Catholic Bulgarians, in the region of Rakovski in southern Bulgaria and
Svishtov Svishtov ( ) List of cities and towns in Bulgaria, is a town in northern Bulgaria, located in Veliko Tarnovo Province on the right bank of the Danube river opposite the Romanian town of Zimnicea. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous S ...
in northern
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, as well as regions in
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. The language of the Banat Bulgarians, late 17th century Bulgarian Catholic migrants to
Banat Banat ( , ; ; ; ) is a geographical and Historical regions of Central Europe, historical region located in the Pannonian Basin that straddles Central Europe, Central and Eastern Europe. It is divided among three countries: the eastern part lie ...
, is phonologically and morphologically identical to the Paulician dialect (
Banat Bulgarian dialect Banat Bulgarian (Banat Bulgarian: ''Palćena balgarsćija jazić'' or ''Banátsća balgarsćija jazić''; ) is the outermost dialect of the Bulgarian language with standardized writing and an old literary tradition. It is spoken by the Banat Bul ...
). The dialect's name derives from the Paulicians, believed to be the ancestors of the Catholic Banat Bulgarians. However, as a result of its three-century separation from Standard Bulgarian and its close interaction with German and Hungarian, Banat Bulgarian has adopted a number of loanwords not present in Standard Bulgarian and a Croatian-based Latin alphabet and is therefore now considered to be one of the three literary forms of Modern Bulgarian. The Paulician dialect is almost entirely surrounded by the Central Balkan dialect. It keeps many archaic characteristics and thus represents an older stage of development of the Rhodopean dialects. Other ex-Paulicians - the "Lovech Pomaks" in northern Bulgaria speak the Galata dialect, which covers the regiolects of the villages: Galata, Gradeshnitsa, Bulgarski Izvor, Kirchevo (Pomashka Leshnitsa), Dobrevtsi, and Rumyantsevo (Blasnichevo). In the past, this dialect had covered areas of the Pleven, Lukovit, Byala Slatina, and Teteven regions.


Phonological and morphological characteristics

* Broad e () for Old Church Slavonic
yat Yat or jat (Ѣ ѣ; italics: ''Ѣ ѣ'') is the thirty-second letter of the Early Cyrillic alphabet, old Cyrillic alphabet. It is usually Romanization, romanized as E with a haček: ''Ě ě''. There is also another version of y ...
in all positions and irrespective of the character of the following syllable : ''бл/бли'' vs. formal Bulgarian ''бял/бели'' (white). However, the broad e has started giving way to , as in the formal language * Merger of
Old Church Slavonic Old Church Slavonic or Old Slavonic ( ) is the first Slavic languages, Slavic literary language and the oldest extant written Slavonic language attested in literary sources. It belongs to the South Slavic languages, South Slavic subgroup of the ...
big yus ѫ, little yus ѧ, ь and ъ into ъ () in a stressed syllable and into a slightly reduced a in an unstressed syllable: ''къшта'' (as in formal Bulgarian – house), ''кл҄ътва'' The diacritic ◌҄ indicates palatalization. vs. formal Bulgarian ''клетва'' (oath), ''гл҄ъдам'' vs. formal Bulgarian ''гледам'' (I look) * Reduction of stressed broad vowels and into their narrow counterparts and , i.e. a development which is exactly opposite to the vowel reduction in the Balkan dialects: ''тибе'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''тебе'' (you), ''жина'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''жена'' (woman) * Traces of Old Bulgarian ы : ''сын'' vs. formal Bulgarian ''син'' (son). An archaic trait, as is considered to be the original pronunciation of Old Church Slavonic ꙑ * Individual cases of transition of stressed or into or : ''объчай'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''обичай'' (custom) f. Russian ''обычай'', Polish ''obyczaj''* Transition of unstressed into : ''шъроко'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''широко'' (wide) * More consonant depalatalizations than in the rest of the Rup dialects and even Standard Bulgarian: ''молъ'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''мол҄ъ'' (I ask) * Transition of х () before a consonant and at the end of the word into the semivowel й (): ''тейно'' vs. Standard Bulgarian ''техно'' (theirs) * Single definite article: -ът, -та, -то, -те For other phonological and morphological characteristics typical for all Rup or Rhodopean dialects, cf. Rup dialects.


Sources

*Милетич, Любомир: Нашите павликяни. Нови документи по миналото за нашите павликяни. Павликянско наречие., СбНУК, София, 1910 - 1911. *Стойков, Стойко: Българска диалектология, Акад. изд. "Проф. Марин Дринов", 200

*Edouard Selian: Le dialect Paulicien, In: The Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Armenian Linguistics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 1995. Publisher: Caravan books, Delmar, New York, 1996, 408 pp.


References


See also

* Pomak language {{Bulgarian dialects Dialects of the Bulgarian language