South Tyrolean dialect

South Tyrolean dialects
RegionSouth Tyrol
Native speakers
(undated figure of 300,000)
German Alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-2gem
ISO 639-3bar
Glottologtyro1234  Tyrol Bavarian

South Tyrolean dialects (Standard German: Südtiroler Dialekte; Italian: dialetti Altoatesini) are a set of dialects spoken in the northern Italian province of South Tyrol. They are part of the larger group of Southern Bavarian,[1] with which they share many similarities.

What differentiates South Tyrolean dialects from other Bavarian varieties is primarily the influence of Italian and Ladin on its lexicon.

Characteristics

69.15% of the inhabitants of South Tyrol speak German as their mother tongue.[2] South Tyrolean tends to be used at home or in informal situations, while standard German in its Austrian variant prevails at school, work and for official purposes. As such, this is a medial diglossia, since the spoken language is mainly the dialect, whereas the written language is mainly the Austrian German variety of Standard German.[1]

The South Tyrolean dialects are related to Bavarian. They preserve their specific traits and are basically homogeneous with Northern Tyrolean dialects. However they have absorbed some Italian terms, especially for administrative purposes.

Vocabulary

Vocabulary[3]
South Tyrolean Standard German Italian English
oftramol manchmal talvolta sometimes
lousn hören (lauschen) udire listen
magari vielleicht, etwa magari maybe
Fraktion Ortsteil frazione hamlet
Kondominium Mehrfamilienhaus condominio condominium/condo (US)
hoi/hoila hallo ciao hello
Rutschelen[4] Locken riccioli curls
Unwolt[4] Rechtsanwalt avvocato lawyer, attorney
Identitätskarte Personalausweis carta d'identità ID card
Eiertreter[5] Nervensäge rompiscatole nuisance

References

  1. ^ a b Zambrelli, Martina (2004). "INTERFERENZE LESSICALI IN SITUAZIONI DI CONTATTO LINGUISTICO" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Suche | Landesinstitut für Statistik (Astat) | Autonome Provinz Bozen - Südtirol" (PDF). www.provinz.bz.it. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  3. ^ "Ecco lo slang di Bolzano, da "olfo" a "bätsch" - Cronaca - Alto Adige (Dead link)". 2011-12-15. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  4. ^ a b "Dialetto altoatesino - Alto Adige, Provincia di Bolzano". Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  5. ^ Pillon, Kager Matthias, Gloria. "oschpele.ritten.org - Das Südtiroler Dialekt Wörterbuch". oschpele.ritten.org. Retrieved 2018-07-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)