Piedmontese is divided into three major groups • Western, which include the dialects of
Turin and
Cuneo. • Eastern, which in turn is divided into south-eastern (Astigiano, Roero, Monregalese, High Montferrat, Langarolo, Alessandrino) and north-eastern (Low Montferrat, Biellese, Vercellese, Valsesiano). • Canavese, spoken in the
Canavese region in north-western Piedmont. The variants can be detected in the variation of the accent and variation of words. It is sometimes difficult to understand a person that speaks a different Piedmontese from the one you are used to, as the words or accents are not the same.
Eastern and western group The Eastern Piedmontese group is phonologically more innovative than its Western counterpart. Words that in the West end in jt, jd or t in the East end in
[dʒ] or
[tʃ], for example Western , , and (milk, all and old) correspond to Eastern , and . A typical Eastern feature is as an allophone of : at word end, at the end of verbal infinitives, as in "to read" and "to be" (Western ,
vs. Eastern , ) and in
feminine plurals. Nevertheless, this development is also shared partially (in the case of the infinitive) by most Western dialects, including that of Turin, which is the most spoken dialect of Western Piedmontese and also of the whole language. A morphological feature that sharply divides the East from the West is the indicative imperfect conjugation of irregular verbs. In the East, the suffix -ava/iva is used, while in the West, the corresponding suffix is -asìa/isìa. The groups are also distinguished by differing conjugations of the present simple of irregular verbs: , , (to give, to go, to stay).
Judeo-Piedmontese A variety of Piedmontese was
Judeo-Piedmontese, a dialect spoken by the Piedmontese
Jews until the
Second World War, when most were killed during the
Holocaust. Some survivors knew the language but as of 2015, the language had gone extinct. It had many loanwards from
Provencal,
Spanish and
Hebrew. It kept many conservative features that Piedmontese abandoned over time. The language never became as large in terms of words as larger
Jewish languages like
Yiddish, and it never developed a standardized writing system. == Phonology ==