Campidanese Sardinian Explained

Campidanese Sardinian
Nativename:sardu campidanesu<br />campidanesu
Ethnicity:Sardinians
States:Italy
Region:Sardinia
(Metropolitan City of Cagliari;
Central-southern part of the Province of Oristano;
Province of South Sardinia;
Southern part of the Province of Nuoro)
Speakers:500,000
Date:2007
Ref:e18
Refname:Campidanese Sardinian
Familycolor:Indo-European
Fam2:Italic
Fam3:Latino-Faliscan
Fam4:Latin
Fam5:Romance
Fam6:Southern Romance?
Fam7:Sardinian
Iso1:sc
Iso2:srd
Iso3:sro
Iso3comment:
Campidanese Sardinian
Glotto:camp1261
Glottoname:
Campidanese Sardinian
Lingua:51-AAA-sd
Map:Sardinia Language Map.png
Mapcaption:Languages and dialects of Sardinia
Notice:IPA

Campidanese Sardinian[1] (Sardinian: sardu campidanesu, Italian: sardo campidanese) is one of the two written standards of the Sardinian language, which is often considered one of the most, if not the most conservative of all the Romance languages. The orthography is based on the spoken dialects of central southern Sardinia, identified by certain attributes which are not found, or found to a lesser degree, among the Sardinian dialects centered on the other written form, Logudorese. Its ISO 639-3 code is sro.

Traditionally the name Campidanu (Italian: [[Campidano]] in Italian) refers to the fertile area located around the towns of Guspini and Villacidro. Campidanese dialects can be found across the entire Province of Cagliari and not just the Province of Medio Campidano area. Campidanese also extends into parts of the Province of Nuoro, notably the Ogliastra area and in the southern half of the Province of Oristano, the capital included. However, it is at this point that the dialects merge into Logudorese.

Subvariants

There are seven main subdialects of Campidanese Sardinian, namely Western Campidanese, Sarrabese (sarrabesu), Southern Barbagian, and Oristano's ('aristanesu or also arborensi), Ogliastra's (ollastrinu), Cagliari's (casteddaju), and the varieties of Sulcis (meurreddinu). Casteddaju is the dialect spoken in the island's capital; however, it extends to most of the neighbouring towns and villages within a 15 km radius of Cagliari. In 2009, the provincial administration of Cagliari approved the spelling, phonetics, morphology, and vocabulary rules for Standard Campidanese Sardinian.[2]

Vocabulary

Campidanese Sardinian has some borrowed words from Aragonese, Catalan and Spanish. Since the early 20th century, there has been an increase in lexical borrowing from Italian as well; that is particularly evident with technological words for which there is no Campidanese equivalent. However, many words that are from Italian have been changed phonetically so that they sound Sardinian. Italian loan words that end in an o are often substituted with a u. The strong Campidanese accent also changes the sound of the word.

Characteristics

  1. Singular nouns descending from 3rd declension Latin nouns ending in "-i" (Campidanese pisci vs Logudorese pische)
  2. Plural definite article of "is" (Campidanese is terras vs Logudorese sas terras)
  3. Gerund in "-endi" (Campidanese èssendi vs Logudorese èssende)
  4. Conservation of the Latin phoneme and (pronounced as //kʷ// and pronounced as //ɡʷ//) in words such as akua (water) and sànguni (blood).
  5. Palatalisation of Latin word-initial pronounced as //k// before pronounced as //e// and pronounced as //i// (Lat. centum > centu cf. Logudorese chentu). In medial positions, pronounced as //k// becomes pronounced as //-ʒ-// (Lat. decem > dexi cf. Logudorese deghe) or pronounced as //-ʃʃ-// (Lat. piscem > pisci)
  6. Transformation of pronounced as //rj// to pronounced as //rɡ//, pronounced as //nj// to pronounced as //nɡ//, pronounced as //lj// to pronounced as //ll//, and pronounced as //ti//, pronounced as //te// into pronounced as //tz//
  7. Epenthetic pronounced as //a// before word-initial pronounced as //r// (Lat. rubeum > arrubiu)
  8. Metathesis (Logudorese Carbonia vs Campidanese Crabonia)
  9. Catalan influence (Words such as seu "cathedral" loaned from Catalan)

Campidanese Sardinian is intelligible to those from the central to the southern part of Sardinia, where Logudorese Sardinian is spoken, but it is not to those from the extreme north of the island, where Corsican–Sardinian dialects are spoken.

Italian speakers do not understand Campidanese, like any other dialect of the Sardinian language:[3] Sardinian is an autonomous linguistic group rather than an Italian dialect[4] as it is often noted because of its morphological, syntactic, and lexical differences from Italian.

Writing system

Campidanese is written using the Latin alphabet. Like Italian, Campidanese does not use (w) or (y). Campidanese also uses the digraphs (gh), representing pronounced as /link/, (ch) representing pronounced as /link/ before e and i vowels, (tz) representing pronounced as /link/ and (x), representing pronounced as /link/.

In phonetic syntax, final or intervocalic (t) is pronounced as a pronounced as /link/ (es: issu andat, meaning "he goes", is pronounced) and (s) is pronounced as a pronounced as /link/, (es. sa mesa, meaning "the table", is pronounced sa mez̪a). When there are consonants like s, t or nt at the end of the word, a helping vowel is usually added (es. sa domu, is domus(u), the house, the houses).If preceded by a consonant, an "i" is inserted before the normally-initial s (es: sa scala, is (i)scalas(a), the staircase, the staircases). The spelling rules were established by the Province of Cagliari with a deliberation on March 17, 2010.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hammarström. Harald. Forke. Robert. Haspelmath. Martin. Bank. Sebastian. 2020. Campidanese Sardinian . Glottolog 4.3.
  2. Book: Comitau Scientìficu po sa Norma Campidanesa de su Sardu Standard . Arrègulas po ortografia, fonètica, morfologia e fueddàriu de sa Norma Campidanesa de sa Lìngua Sarda/Regole per ortografia, fonetica, morfologia e vocabolario della Norma Campidanese della Lingua Sarda . 2009 . Alfa Editrice . 978-88-85995-47-5 . 1 . Quartu S. Elena . sc,it . Rules for spelling, phonetics, morphology and vocabulary of the Campidanese standard of the Sardinian language . 422688646.
  3. Web site: Posner . Rebecca . Sala . Marius . Sardinian Language . Encyclopedia Britannica.
  4. Book: De Mauro, Tullio . L'Italia delle Italie . Nuova Guaraldi Editrice . 1979 . Florence . 89.
  5. Web site: Leggi il contenuto . 2015-10-22 . Provincia di Cagliari . 2015-09-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924082549/http://www.provincia.cagliari.it/ProvinciaCa/it/contentview.wp;jsessionid=565728CAFB76E1ED4E9080F0DD01E4B9?contentId=CNG1701 . dead .