Buzet dialect explained

Buzet dialect
Nativename:buzetski dijalekt
Speakers:?
Familycolor:Indo-European
Fam2:Balto-Slavic
Fam3:Slavic
Fam4:South Slavic
Fam5:Western
Fam6:Chakavian
Isoexception:dialect
Glotto:none
Ietf:ckm-u-sd-hr18

The Buzet dialect (Croatian: buzetski dijalekt; also known as buzetsko-gornjomiranski or gornjomiranski) is a sub-dialect of the Chakavian dialect in Croatia. It is spoken in northern Istria around Buzet.

The Buzet dialect is a natural transition between Chakavian, Kajkavian and the Slovenian language. Initially some considered it part of the Kajkavian language area, in the past it was also classified (e.g. by Fran Ramovš) as a Slovene dialect, but other linguists, including Mieczysław Małecki and Pavle Ivić among others, managed to rightly define it as Chakavian and part of the literary Serbo-Croatian language.

The primary features that separate Buzet dialect from the rest of the Chakavian dialects are in the development of the Common Slavic vocalism:

Prosodical system diverges from that of other Chakavian speeches (having lost, for example, the difference between long a short accented vowels). Another unusual feature is the usage of Kajkavian interrogative pronoun kaj "what", instead of the usual Chakavian ča.

As far as the division of Chakavian dialects in Southeastern and Northwestern is concerned, Buzet dialect belongs to Northwestern Chakavian. The Buzet dialect can be divided into two sub-dialects, Northern (majority) and Southern (minority).

References