•
South Slavic •
Eastern South Slavic •
Bulgarian •
Macedonian •
Old Church Slavonic • •
Slovene •
Serbo-Croatian •
Serbian •
Croatian •
Bosnian •
Montenegrin Linguistic prehistory The
Slavic languages are part of the
Balto-Slavic group, which belongs to the
Indo-European language family. The South Slavic languages have been considered a
genetic node in
Slavic studies: defined by a set of phonological, morphological and
lexical innovations (isoglosses) which separate it from the Western and Eastern Slavic groups. That view, however, has been challenged in recent decades (see below). Some innovations encompassing all South Slavic languages are shared with the Eastern Slavic group, but not the Western Slavic. These include: • Consistent application of
Slavic second palatalization before Proto-Slavic *v • Loss of *d and *t before Proto-Slavic *l • Merger of Proto-Slavic *ś (resulting from the second and third palatalization) with *s This is illustrated in the following table: Several
isoglosses have been identified which are thought to represent exclusive common innovations in the South Slavic language group. They are prevalently
phonological in character, whereas
morphological and
syntactical isoglosses are much fewer in number. list the following phonological isoglosses: • Merger of
yers into
schwa-like sound, which became in Serbo-Croatian, or split according to the retained hard/soft quality of the preceding consonant into (Macedonian), or (Bulgarian) • Proto-Slavic *ę > • Proto-Slavic *y > , merging with the reflex of Proto-Slavic *i • Proto-Slavic syllabic liquids *r̥ and *l̥ were retained, but *l̥ was subsequently lost in all the daughter languages with different outputs (> in Serbo-Croatian, > vowel+ or +vowel in Slovene, Bulgarian and Macedonian), and *r̥ became in Bulgarian. This development was identical to the loss of
yer after a liquid consonant. • Hardening of palatals and dental affricates; e.g. š' > š, č' > č, c' > c. • South Slavic form of
liquid metathesis (CoRC > CRaC, CoLC > CLaC etc.) Most of these are not exclusive in character, however, and are shared with some languages of the Eastern and Western Slavic language groups (in particular, Central Slovakian dialects). On that basis, argues that South Slavic exists strictly as a geographical grouping, not forming a true genetic
clade; in other words, there was never a proto-South Slavic language or a period in which all South Slavic dialects exhibited an exclusive set of extensive phonological, morphological or lexical changes (isoglosses) peculiar to them. Furthermore, Matasović argues, there was never a period of cultural or political unity in which Proto-South-Slavic could have existed during which Common South Slavic innovations could have occurred. Several South-Slavic-only lexical and morphological patterns which have been proposed have been postulated to represent common Slavic
archaisms, or are shared with some Slovakian or Ukrainian dialects. The South Slavic dialects form a
dialectal continuum stretching from today's southern
Austria to southeast
Bulgaria. On the level of
dialectology, they are divided into Western South Slavic (Slovene and Serbo-Croatian dialects) and Eastern South Slavic (Bulgarian and Macedonian dialects); these represent separate migrations into the Balkans and were once separated by intervening Hungarian, Romanian, and Albanian populations; as these populations were assimilated, Eastern and Western South Slavic fused with
Torlakian as a transitional dialect. On the other hand, the breakup of the
Ottoman and
Austro-Hungarian Empires, followed by formation of
nation-states in the 19th and 20th centuries, led to the development and codification of
standard languages. Standard Slovene, Bulgarian, and Macedonian are based on distinct dialects. The Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin, and Serbian
standard variants of the
pluricentric Serbo-Croatian are based on the
same dialect (
Shtokavian). Thus, in most cases national and ethnic borders do not coincide with dialectal boundaries.
Note: Due to the differing political status of languages/dialects and different historical contexts, the classifications are arbitrary to some degree.
Dialectal classification The South Slavic languages constitute a
dialect continuum. •
South Slavic •
Eastern South Slavic •
Bulgarian dialects •
Eastern Bulgarian dialects •
Western Bulgarian dialects •
Macedonian dialects •
Northern Macedonian dialects •
Western Macedonian dialects •
Southeastern Macedonian dialects •
Transitional South Slavic (
Torlakian) •
Transitional Bulgarian dialects in western Bulgaria •
Gora dialect in southern Kosovo, western North Macedonia and northeast Albania •
Prizren-Timok dialect in southeast Serbia and eastern Kosovo •
Karashevian dialect in western Romania • •
Shtokavian dialects •
Šumadija–Vojvodina dialect (Ekavian, Neo-Shtokavian): Serbia •
Smederevo–Vršac dialect (Ekavian, Old-Shtokavian): east-central Serbia •
Kosovo–Resava dialect (Ekavian, Old-Shtokavian): north Kosovo, eastern central Serbia •
Zeta-Raška dialect (Ijekavian, Old-Shtokavian), in south and east Montenegro and southwest Serbia •
Eastern Herzegovinian dialect (Ijekavian, Neo-Shtokavian), Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro •
Eastern Bosnian dialect (Ijekavian, Old-Shtokavian), in central and northern Bosnia •
Slavonian dialect (mixed yat, Old-Shtokavian), in eastern Croatia •
Younger Ikavian dialect (Ikavian) with 3 subdialects — Dalmatian, Danubian (
Bunjevac speech), and Littoral-Lika: in Dalmatia, central Bosnia, northern Serbia, southern Hungary (incl. Budapest) •
Prizren-Timok dialect (Ekavian, Old-Shtokavian), in southeast Serbia and south Kosovo •
Chakavian dialects •
Buzet dialect: Croatia •
Northern Chakavian dialect: Croatia •
Central Chakavian dialect •
Southern Chakavian dialect: Croatia •
Southeastern Chakavian dialect •
Southwestern Istrian dialect: Croatia •
Lastovo dialect: Croatia •
Kajkavian dialects, in Croatia •
Zagorje–Međimurje dialect •
Križevci–Podravina dialect •
Turopolje–Posavina dialect •
Prigorje dialect •
Lower Sutla dialect • •
Slovene dialects Lutheran New Testament, the
Nouvi Zákon (1770s) |alt=Open, illustrated Prekmurje New Testament from the 18th century • Littoral
Slovene dialect: Primorsko; west Slovenia and Adriatic • Rovte Slovene dialect: Rovtarsko; between Littoral and Carniolan • Upper and Lower Carniolan dialect: Gorenjsko and Dolenjsko; central; basis of
Standard Slovene • Styrian dialect: Štajersko; eastern Slovenia •
Pannonian or
Prekmurje Slovene dialect: Panonsko; far eastern Slovenia • Carinthian dialect: Koroško; far north and northwest Slovenia •
Resian dialect: Rozajansko; Italy, west of Carinthian • Other •
Burgenland Croatian (mixed), minority in Austria and Hungary == Eastern South Slavic languages ==