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Gheg Albanian

Gheg (also spelled Geg; Gheg Albanian: gegnishtja, Standard Albanian: gegërishtja) is one of the two major varieties of Albanian, the other being Tosk. The geographic dividing line between the two varieties is the Shkumbin River, which winds its way through central Albania.[2][3] Gheg is spoken in northern and central Albania, Kosovo, northwestern North Macedonia, southeastern Montenegro and southern Serbia by the Albanian dialectal subgroup known as Ghegs.[3]

Gheg
gegnishtja
RegionAlbania, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia
Native speakers
4.1 million (2012–2021)[1]
Early forms
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3aln
Glottologgheg1238
Linguasphere55-AAA-aa
A map showing Gheg speakers in green.
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Gheg does not have any official status as a written language in any country. Publications in Kosovo and North Macedonia are in Standard Albanian, which is based on Tosk. However, some authors continue to write in Gheg.

History edit

Before World War II, there had been no official attempt to enforce a unified Albanian literary language; both literary Gheg and literary Tosk were used.[3] The communist regime in Albania imposed nationwide a standard that was based on the variant of Tosk spoken in and around the city of Korçë.[3]

With the warming of relations between Albania and Yugoslavia starting in the late 1960s, the Kosovo Albanians—the largest ethnic group in Kosovo—adopted the same standard[4] in a process that began in 1968 and culminated with the appearance of the first unified Albanian orthographic handbook and dictionary in 1972.[3] Although they had until then used Gheg and almost all Albanian writers in Yugoslavia were Ghegs, they chose to write in Tosk for political reasons.[5]

The change of literary language has had significant political and cultural consequences because the Albanian language is the main criterion for Albanian self identity.[6] The standardization has been criticized, notably by the writer Arshi Pipa, who claimed that the move had deprived Albanian of its richness at the expense of the Ghegs.[7] He referred to literary Albanian as a "monstrosity" produced by the Tosk communist leadership, who had conquered anti-communist northern Albania and imposed their own dialect on the Ghegs.[8]

Kosovan language edit

In post-WWII Yugoslavia there was a project to create a Kosovan language, which would have been largely Gheg. This was in line with Josip Broz Tito's reorganization of the country into a federation of ethnolinguistically defined nations, which relied heavily on language policy to create or reinforce separation of these nations from such neighbors as Bulgaria, and it built on efforts by communist Albania to unite with Yugoslavia. The idea of union was dropped though, in the aftermath of the split between Stalin and Tito in 1948, as Albania sided with Moscow. As a result of this rupture and other factors, no such Kosovan language was ever created. Indeed, in 1974 the Gheg-based standard Albanian was adopted as an official language of Kosovo.[9]

Dialects edit

The Gheg dialect is divided by four sub-dialects: Central Gheg, Southern Gheg, Northwestern Gheg (or Western Gheg), and Northeastern Gheg (or Eastern Gheg).

Southern Gheg edit

Southern Gheg is spoken in the ethno-geographic regions of central and, areas of, north-central Albania; among these being: 1) Durrës, which includes its surrounding villages and environs and municipal units of Ishëm and Shijak; 2) Tirana, including the surrounding villages and environs under the municipal units of Petrelë, Dajt, Vorë, Pezë, Ndroq, Zall-Herr, Zall-Bastar, Shëngjergj, Kavajë, and Rrogozhinë (the last two traditionally being grouped with the Durrës region); 3) Elbasan, including its surrounding villages and the settlements under the municipal units of Labinot-Mal, Labinot-Fushë, Bradashesh, Funarë, Krrabë, and Peqin (the last two regions generally speak dialects closer to that of the Durrës and Tirana region); and 4) Librazhd, including the surrounding settlements and those under the ethnographic regions and municipal units of Çermenikë, Qukës, Prrenjas, Hotolisht; and 5) small sub-regions of the Dibër County such as Martanesh; and 6) northern Pogradec.

Southern Gheg can be further broken down into two major groupings: Southwestern Gheg and Southeastern Gheg. The first group includes the dialects spoken in the regions of Durrës, Tirana, and sections of Elbasan such as Peqin and the western villages of Krrabë. The latter group, on the other hand, is spoken in the regions of Elbasan, Librazhd, and Martanesh. The spoken dialects of Shëngjergj, in Tirana, and Krrabë, in Elbasan, act as transitional dialects between the two groups, although the former is closer to the Southwestern group and the eastern villages of the latter with the Southeastern group.

The dialects of Ishëm, Vorë, Zall-Herr, and Zall-Dajt represent the northernmost extensions of Southern Gheg (specifically Southwestern Gheg), and as such, they show direct influences from Central Gheg (spoken in neighbouring Krujë, Mat, and Bulqizë); thus they can be labelled as transitional dialects.[10]

Certain settlements to the extreme south of the Southern Gheg dialect zone, which are included in the largely Southern Gheg-speaking units, speak transitional dialects depicting both characteristics of Gheg and Tosk Albanian. These include villages such as Dars in Peqin, the coastal villages of southernmost Kavajë, and a number of settlements in Qukës and Hotolisht.[11]

Central Gheg edit

Central Gheg is a sub-dialect of Gheg spoken in much of north-central Albania, including: Krujë, Mati, Dibër, Luma, and Mirdita.[12] Central Gheg is also spoken outside of Albania, with the majority of Albanians from North Macedonia speaking dialects of Central Gheg[13] - including the divergent idiom spoken in Upper Reka.[14] According to linguists such as Jorgji Gjinari and Xhevat Lloshi, the Central Gheg dialect group represents a sub-group of the larger Southern Gheg zone.[12][15]

Northern Gheg edit

The Italian linguist Carlo Tagliavini puts the Gheg of Kosovo and North Macedonia in Eastern Gheg.[19]

Northeastern Gheg edit

Northeastern Gheg, sometimes known as Eastern Gheg, is a variant or sub-dialect of Gheg Albanian spoken in Northeastern Albania, Kosovo, and Serbia.

The Northeastern Gheg dialectal area begins roughly down from the eastern Montenegrin-Albanian border, including the Albanian districts (Second-level administrative country subdivisions) of Tropojë, Pukë, Has, Mirditë and Kukës; the whole of Kosovo[a], and the municipalities of Bujanovac and Preševo in Serbia. The tribes in Albania speaking the dialect include Nikaj-Merturi, Puka, Gashi, and Tropoja.

The Albanian speech in roughly around Tetovo and Karadak, in North Macedonia, is sometimes regarded part of Northeastern Gheg.[citation needed]

Calques of Serbian origin are evident in the areas of syntax and morphology.[20] The Northeastern Gheg slightly differs from Northwestern Gheg (spoken in Shkodër),[3] as the pronunciation is deeper and more prolonged[clarification needed]. Northeastern Gheg is considered to be the autonomous branch of Gheg Albanian[21] in turn, the Northeastern Gheg dialects themselves differ greatly among themselves.[22]

The dialect is also split in a few other minority dialects, where the phoneme [y] of standard Albanian is pronounced as [i], i.e. "ylberi" to "ilberi" (both meaning rainbow); "dy" to "di" (both meaning two).[citation needed] In Northeastern Gheg, the palatal stops of standard Albanian, such as [c] (as in qen, "dog") and [ɟ] (as in gjumë, "sleep"), are realised as palato-alveolar affricates, [t͡ʃ] and [d͡ʒ] respectively.[23]

Northwestern Gheg edit

Northwestern Gheg, sometimes known as Western Gheg, is a sub-dialect of Gheg Albanian spoken in Northwestern Albania, Southern Montenegro, and Western Kosovo. The inhabitants of the renowned region of Malësia are Northwestern Gheg speakers. The tribes that speak this dialect are the Malësor, Dukagjin and other highlander tribes which include (Malësia): Hoti, Gruda, Triepshi, Kelmendi, Kastrati, Shkreli, Lohja, etc., (Dukagjin) : Shala, Shoshi, Shllaku, Dushmani, etc., etc..(Lezhë),...(see Tribes of Albania).

The main contrast between Northwestern Gheg and Northeastern Gheg is the slight difference in the tone and or pronunciation of the respective dialects. Northwestern Gheg does not have the more deeper sounding a's, e's, etc. and is considered by some to sound slightly more soft and clear in tone compared to Northeastern Gheg, yet still spoken with a rough Gheg undertone compared to the Southern Albanian dialects. Other differences include different vocabulary, and the use of words like "kon" (been), and "qysh" (how?) which are used in Northeastern Gheg, and not often used in Northwestern Gheg. Instead Northwestern Gheg speakers say "kjen or ken" (been), and use the adverb "si" to say (how?). For example in Northeastern Gheg to say "when I was young", you would say, "kur jam kon i ri", while in Northwestern Gheg you would say "kur kam ken i ri, kur jam ken i ri.".[citation needed]

Although there is a degree of variance, Northwestern Gheg and Northeastern Gheg are still very much similar, and speakers of both sub-dialects have no problem understanding and having a conversation with one another.

Differentiations between the Northwestern Gheg dialects themselves are minuscule, unlike the Northeastern Gheg dialects where there is more differentiation.

Phonology edit

Assimilations are common in Gheg but are not part of the Albanian literary language, which is a standardized form of Tosk Albanian.[24]

Vowels edit

Oral edit

IPA Spelling
[a] a (mas: 'after')
[ɑ] â (prâpë: 'back')
[ɒ] ä (knäqët: 'having fun')
[e] e (dere: 'door')
[ɛ] ê (mênôj: 'I think')
[ə] ë (nër: 'under')
[i] i (dritë: 'light')
[o] o (kos: 'yoghurt')
[ɔ] ô (dôrë: 'hand')
[u] u (kur: 'when')
[y] y (ylli: 'star')

Nasal edit

IPA Spelling[25]
[ɑ̃] ã (hãna: 'moon')
[ɛ̃] ẽ (mrẽna: 'within')
[ĩ] ĩ (hĩna: 'I entered')
[ɔ̃] õ (fõ: 'satiated', some dialects)
[ũ] ũ (hũna: 'nose')
[ỹ] ỹ (gjỹs: 'half')

Examples edit

Standard Tosk Cham Arbëresh South Gheg Central Gheg Northeastern Gheg Northwestern Gheg English
Shqipëri Shkjipërí Shqiprí Shqipní Shqypní/Shipni Shipní "Albania"
Një Nji, njo Ni Ni, njo/nja Nja, nji "One"
Bëj Bunj Bôj Bâj, boj Bâj "I do"
Qenë Qënë Klënë Qên Kên Kôn, kân Kjen "Been"
Pleqëri Pleqrĩ Plekjërí Pleqni Pleçni "Old age"
Është Është or Ësht' Është Isht or ë Ôsht or ô Osht or o/Âsht or â Âsht or â "Is"
Nëntë Nônt Nôn Non, Nond/Nân Nând "Nine"
Shtëpi Shpi Shpí Shp(e)j Shp(a)j/Shpi,Shpí Shp(e)i "Home"

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gheg at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)  
  2. ^ Brown and Ogilvie (2008), p. 23. The river Shkumbin in central Albania historically forms the boundary between those two dialects, with the population on the north speaking varieties of Geg and the population on the south varieties of Tosk.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Joseph 2003, When Languages Collide: Perspectives on Language Conflict, Language Competition, and Language Coexistence, p. 266: "Northeastern Geg"
  4. ^ Tomasz Kamusella. 2016. The idea of a Kosovan language in Yugoslavia's language politics (pp 217-237). International Journal of the Sociology of Language. Vol 242.
  5. ^ Pipa, p. 173: Although the Albanian population in Yugoslavia is almost exclusively Gheg, the Albanian writers there have chosen, for sheer political reasons, to write in Tosk
  6. ^ Telos. Telos Press. 1989. p. 1. Retrieved 16 July 2013. The political-cultural relevance of the abolition of literary Gheg with literary Tosk.... Albanians identify themselves with language...
  7. ^ Canadian review of studies in nationalism: Revue canadienne des études sur le nationalisme, Volume 19. University of Prince Edward Island. 1992. p. 206. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  8. ^ Canadian review of studies in nationalism: Revue canadienne des études sur le nationalisme, Volume 19. University of Prince Edward Island. 1992. p. 207. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  9. ^ Tomasz Kamusella. 2016. The Idea of a Kosovan Language in Yugoslavia's Language Politics (pp 217-237). International Journal of the Sociology of Language. Vol 242. DOI: 10.1515/ijsl-2016-0040
  10. ^ Çeliku, Mehmet (2020). Gegërishtja jugperëndimore. Tiranë: Akademia e studimeve albanologjike. pp. 9–10.
  11. ^ Çeliku 2020, p. 223.
  12. ^ a b Çeliku 2020, p. 9.
  13. ^ Lloshi, Xhevat (1999). "Albanian". In Büttner, Uwe & Hinrichs, Uwe (eds.). Handbuch der Südosteuropa-Linguistik. Harrassowitz. p. 285.
  14. ^ Friedman, Victor A (2006). "Balkanizing the Balkan Linguistic Sprachbund" in Aichenwald et al, Grammars in Contact: A Cross-Linguistic Typology. Pages 209.
  15. ^ Lloshi 1999, p. 285.
  16. ^ a b Meniku, Linda (2008). Gheg Albanian Reader. Page 7
  17. ^ Meniku (2008). Gheg Albanian Reader. Page 7
  18. ^ Matasović, Ranka (2012). "A Grammatical Sketch of Albanian for students of Indo-European". Page 42-43
  19. ^ Tagliavini, Carlo (1942). Le parlate albanesi di tipo Ghego orientale: (Dardania e Macedonia nord-occidentale). Reale Accademia d'Italia.
  20. ^ Pipa, p. 56
  21. ^ Pipa, p. 57: Northern Gheg is divided vertically. Later this proved to be appropriate chiefly for methodological reasons, seeing that Eastern Gheg is considered to be an autonomous branch.
  22. ^ Van Coetsem, Frans (1980), Contributions to Historical Linguistics: Issues and Materials, Brill Archive, ISBN 9004061304. p. 274: "Northeastern Geg ... differed greatly among themselves"
  23. ^ Pipa, p. 59
  24. ^ Martin Camaj; Leonard Fox (January 1984). Albanian Grammar: With Exercises, Chrestomathy and Glossaries. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 4. ISBN 978-3-447-02467-9.
  25. ^ Fialuur i voghel Sccyp e ltinisct[sic] (Small Dictionary of Albanian and Latin), 1895, Shkodër

Bibliography edit

  • Carl Coleman Seltzer; Carleton Stevens Coon; Joseph Franklin Ewing (1950). The mountains of giants: a racial and cultural study of the north Albanian mountain Ghegs. The Museum.
  • Pipa, Arshi; Repishti, Sami (1984). Studies on Kosova. East European Monographs #155. ISBN 0880330473.
  • Elsie, Robert. . Archived from the original on 7 May 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2012.

Further reading edit

  • "South Serbia Albanians Seek Community of Municipalities". 13 March 2013. Retrieved 17 July 2013. South Serbia is home to 50,000 or so Albanians.
  • "Presevo valley tension". BBC. 2 February 2001. Retrieved 24 October 2013. Initially, the guerrillas' publicly acknowledged objective was to protect the local ethnic Albanian population of some 70,000 people from the repressive actions of the Serb security forces.
  • "The Presevo Valley of Southern Serbia alongside Kosovo The Case for Decentralisation and Minority Protection" (PDF). Retrieved 24 October 2013. The total population of the Valley is around 86,000 inhabitants of whom around 57,000 are Albanians and the rest are Serbs and Roma
  • "Yugoslavia: Serbia Offers Peace Plan For Presevo Valley". Retrieved 24 October 2013. The Serbian peace proposal calls for integrating the Presevo valley's 70,000 ethnic Albanian residents into mainstream Serbian political and social life.

External links edit

  • Albanian Etymology
  • ISO Documentation

gheg, albanian, redirects, here, spokane, international, airport, iata, spokane, international, airport, gheg, also, spelled, gegnishtja, standard, albanian, gegërishtja, major, varieties, albanian, other, being, tosk, geographic, dividing, line, between, vari. Geg redirects here For Spokane International Airport IATA GEG see Spokane International Airport Gheg also spelled Geg Gheg Albanian gegnishtja Standard Albanian gegerishtja is one of the two major varieties of Albanian the other being Tosk The geographic dividing line between the two varieties is the Shkumbin River which winds its way through central Albania 2 3 Gheg is spoken in northern and central Albania Kosovo northwestern North Macedonia southeastern Montenegro and southern Serbia by the Albanian dialectal subgroup known as Ghegs 3 GheggegnishtjaRegionAlbania Kosovo North Macedonia Montenegro SerbiaNative speakers4 1 million 2012 2021 1 Language familyIndo European Paleo BalkanAlbanianGhegEarly formsProto Indo European Proto AlbanianDialectsIstrian Albanian Arbanasi Northeastern Gheg Northwestern Gheg Upper Reka Northern Gheg Southern GhegLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code aln class extiw title iso639 3 aln aln a Glottologgheg1238Linguasphere55 AAA aaA map showing Gheg speakers in green This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Gheg does not have any official status as a written language in any country Publications in Kosovo and North Macedonia are in Standard Albanian which is based on Tosk However some authors continue to write in Gheg Contents 1 History 2 Kosovan language 3 Dialects 3 1 Southern Gheg 3 2 Central Gheg 3 3 Northern Gheg 3 3 1 Northeastern Gheg 3 3 2 Northwestern Gheg 4 Phonology 4 1 Vowels 4 1 1 Oral 4 1 2 Nasal 5 Examples 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editBefore World War II there had been no official attempt to enforce a unified Albanian literary language both literary Gheg and literary Tosk were used 3 The communist regime in Albania imposed nationwide a standard that was based on the variant of Tosk spoken in and around the city of Korce 3 With the warming of relations between Albania and Yugoslavia starting in the late 1960s the Kosovo Albanians the largest ethnic group in Kosovo adopted the same standard 4 in a process that began in 1968 and culminated with the appearance of the first unified Albanian orthographic handbook and dictionary in 1972 3 Although they had until then used Gheg and almost all Albanian writers in Yugoslavia were Ghegs they chose to write in Tosk for political reasons 5 The change of literary language has had significant political and cultural consequences because the Albanian language is the main criterion for Albanian self identity 6 The standardization has been criticized notably by the writer Arshi Pipa who claimed that the move had deprived Albanian of its richness at the expense of the Ghegs 7 He referred to literary Albanian as a monstrosity produced by the Tosk communist leadership who had conquered anti communist northern Albania and imposed their own dialect on the Ghegs 8 Kosovan language editIn post WWII Yugoslavia there was a project to create a Kosovan language which would have been largely Gheg This was in line with Josip Broz Tito s reorganization of the country into a federation of ethnolinguistically defined nations which relied heavily on language policy to create or reinforce separation of these nations from such neighbors as Bulgaria and it built on efforts by communist Albania to unite with Yugoslavia The idea of union was dropped though in the aftermath of the split between Stalin and Tito in 1948 as Albania sided with Moscow As a result of this rupture and other factors no such Kosovan language was ever created Indeed in 1974 the Gheg based standard Albanian was adopted as an official language of Kosovo 9 Dialects editThe Gheg dialect is divided by four sub dialects Central Gheg Southern Gheg Northwestern Gheg or Western Gheg and Northeastern Gheg or Eastern Gheg Southern Gheg edit Southern Gheg is spoken in the ethno geographic regions of central and areas of north central Albania among these being 1 Durres which includes its surrounding villages and environs and municipal units of Ishem and Shijak 2 Tirana including the surrounding villages and environs under the municipal units of Petrele Dajt Vore Peze Ndroq Zall Herr Zall Bastar Shengjergj Kavaje and Rrogozhine the last two traditionally being grouped with the Durres region 3 Elbasan including its surrounding villages and the settlements under the municipal units of Labinot Mal Labinot Fushe Bradashesh Funare Krrabe and Peqin the last two regions generally speak dialects closer to that of the Durres and Tirana region and 4 Librazhd including the surrounding settlements and those under the ethnographic regions and municipal units of Cermenike Qukes Prrenjas Hotolisht and 5 small sub regions of the Diber County such as Martanesh and 6 northern Pogradec Southern Gheg can be further broken down into two major groupings Southwestern Gheg and Southeastern Gheg The first group includes the dialects spoken in the regions of Durres Tirana and sections of Elbasan such as Peqin and the western villages of Krrabe The latter group on the other hand is spoken in the regions of Elbasan Librazhd and Martanesh The spoken dialects of Shengjergj in Tirana and Krrabe in Elbasan act as transitional dialects between the two groups although the former is closer to the Southwestern group and the eastern villages of the latter with the Southeastern group The dialects of Ishem Vore Zall Herr and Zall Dajt represent the northernmost extensions of Southern Gheg specifically Southwestern Gheg and as such they show direct influences from Central Gheg spoken in neighbouring Kruje Mat and Bulqize thus they can be labelled as transitional dialects 10 Certain settlements to the extreme south of the Southern Gheg dialect zone which are included in the largely Southern Gheg speaking units speak transitional dialects depicting both characteristics of Gheg and Tosk Albanian These include villages such as Dars in Peqin the coastal villages of southernmost Kavaje and a number of settlements in Qukes and Hotolisht 11 Central Gheg edit Central Gheg is a sub dialect of Gheg spoken in much of north central Albania including Kruje Mati Diber Luma and Mirdita 12 Central Gheg is also spoken outside of Albania with the majority of Albanians from North Macedonia speaking dialects of Central Gheg 13 including the divergent idiom spoken in Upper Reka 14 According to linguists such as Jorgji Gjinari and Xhevat Lloshi the Central Gheg dialect group represents a sub group of the larger Southern Gheg zone 12 15 Northern Gheg edit Northeastern Gheg include the Albanians of Bujanoc Besiane Gjilan Mitrovice Medvegje Presheve Prishtine Vushtrri and the formerly Albanian populated territories of Nis Sanjak Nis Vranje Toplica District 16 Northwestern Gheg or often called as Prizren old dialect is mostly spoken in Prizren Shkoder Shiroka Vermosh Selce Vukel Lepushe Nikc Tamare Tuzi Shestani Kraja Ulcinj Bar Plav Gusinje Peje Gjakove Lezhe and the rest of Malesia 16 One isolated and particularly divergent Northwestern 17 dialect the Arbanasi dialect of diaspora Albanians in Croatia 18 The Italian linguist Carlo Tagliavini puts the Gheg of Kosovo and North Macedonia in Eastern Gheg 19 Northeastern Gheg edit Northeastern Gheg sometimes known as Eastern Gheg is a variant or sub dialect of Gheg Albanian spoken in Northeastern Albania Kosovo and Serbia The Northeastern Gheg dialectal area begins roughly down from the eastern Montenegrin Albanian border including the Albanian districts Second level administrative country subdivisions of Tropoje Puke Has Mirdite and Kukes the whole of Kosovo a and the municipalities of Bujanovac and Presevo in Serbia The tribes in Albania speaking the dialect include Nikaj Merturi Puka Gashi and Tropoja The Albanian speech in roughly around Tetovo and Karadak in North Macedonia is sometimes regarded part of Northeastern Gheg citation needed Calques of Serbian origin are evident in the areas of syntax and morphology 20 The Northeastern Gheg slightly differs from Northwestern Gheg spoken in Shkoder 3 as the pronunciation is deeper and more prolonged clarification needed Northeastern Gheg is considered to be the autonomous branch of Gheg Albanian 21 in turn the Northeastern Gheg dialects themselves differ greatly among themselves 22 The dialect is also split in a few other minority dialects where the phoneme y of standard Albanian is pronounced as i i e ylberi to ilberi both meaning rainbow dy to di both meaning two citation needed In Northeastern Gheg the palatal stops of standard Albanian such as c as in qen dog and ɟ as in gjume sleep are realised as palato alveolar affricates t ʃ and d ʒ respectively 23 Northwestern Gheg edit Northwestern Gheg sometimes known as Western Gheg is a sub dialect of Gheg Albanian spoken in Northwestern Albania Southern Montenegro and Western Kosovo The inhabitants of the renowned region of Malesia are Northwestern Gheg speakers The tribes that speak this dialect are the Malesor Dukagjin and other highlander tribes which include Malesia Hoti Gruda Triepshi Kelmendi Kastrati Shkreli Lohja etc Dukagjin Shala Shoshi Shllaku Dushmani etc etc Lezhe see Tribes of Albania The main contrast between Northwestern Gheg and Northeastern Gheg is the slight difference in the tone and or pronunciation of the respective dialects Northwestern Gheg does not have the more deeper sounding a s e s etc and is considered by some to sound slightly more soft and clear in tone compared to Northeastern Gheg yet still spoken with a rough Gheg undertone compared to the Southern Albanian dialects Other differences include different vocabulary and the use of words like kon been and qysh how which are used in Northeastern Gheg and not often used in Northwestern Gheg Instead Northwestern Gheg speakers say kjen or ken been and use the adverb si to say how For example in Northeastern Gheg to say when I was young you would say kur jam kon i ri while in Northwestern Gheg you would say kur kam ken i ri kur jam ken i ri citation needed Although there is a degree of variance Northwestern Gheg and Northeastern Gheg are still very much similar and speakers of both sub dialects have no problem understanding and having a conversation with one another Differentiations between the Northwestern Gheg dialects themselves are minuscule unlike the Northeastern Gheg dialects where there is more differentiation Phonology editAssimilations are common in Gheg but are not part of the Albanian literary language which is a standardized form of Tosk Albanian 24 Vowels edit Oral edit This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message IPA Spelling a a mas after ɑ a prape back ɒ a knaqet having fun e e dere door ɛ e menoj I think e e ner under i i drite light o o kos yoghurt ɔ o dore hand u u kur when y y ylli star Nasal edit IPA Spelling 25 ɑ a hana moon ɛ ẽ mrẽna within ĩ ĩ hĩna I entered ɔ o fo satiated some dialects ũ ũ hũna nose ỹ ỹ gjỹs half Examples editStandard Tosk Cham Arberesh South Gheg Central Gheg Northeastern Gheg Northwestern Gheg EnglishShqiperi Shkjiperi Shqipri Shqipni Shqypni Shipni Shipni Albania Nje Nji njo Ni Ni njo nja Nja nji One Bej Bunj Boj Baj boj Baj I do Qene Qene Klene Qen Ken Kon kan Kjen Been Pleqeri Pleqrĩ Plekjeri Pleqni Plecni Old age Eshte Eshte or Esht Eshte Isht or e Osht or o Osht or o Asht or a Asht or a Is Nente Nont Non Non Nond Nan Nand Nine Shtepi Shpi Shpi Shp e j Shp a j Shpi Shpi Shp e i Home See also editAlbanian dialects Arberesh language Arvanitika Cham Albanian dialectReferences edit Gheg at Ethnologue 25th ed 2022 nbsp Brown and Ogilvie 2008 p 23 The river Shkumbin in central Albania historically forms the boundary between those two dialects with the population on the north speaking varieties of Geg and the population on the south varieties of Tosk a b c d e f Joseph 2003 When Languages Collide Perspectives on Language Conflict Language Competition and Language Coexistence p 266 Northeastern Geg Tomasz Kamusella 2016 The idea of a Kosovan language in Yugoslavia s language politics pp 217 237 International Journal of the Sociology of Language Vol 242 Pipa p 173 Although the Albanian population in Yugoslavia is almost exclusively Gheg the Albanian writers there have chosen for sheer political reasons to write in Tosk Telos Telos Press 1989 p 1 Retrieved 16 July 2013 The political cultural relevance of the abolition of literary Gheg with literary Tosk Albanians identify themselves with language Canadian review of studies in nationalism Revue canadienne des etudes sur le nationalisme Volume 19 University of Prince Edward Island 1992 p 206 Retrieved 10 January 2012 Canadian review of studies in nationalism Revue canadienne des etudes sur le nationalisme Volume 19 University of Prince Edward Island 1992 p 207 Retrieved 10 January 2012 Tomasz Kamusella 2016 The Idea of a Kosovan Language in Yugoslavia s Language Politics pp 217 237 International Journal of the Sociology of Language Vol 242 DOI 10 1515 ijsl 2016 0040 Celiku Mehmet 2020 Gegerishtja jugperendimore Tirane Akademia e studimeve albanologjike pp 9 10 Celiku 2020 p 223 a b Celiku 2020 p 9 Lloshi Xhevat 1999 Albanian In Buttner Uwe amp Hinrichs Uwe eds Handbuch der Sudosteuropa Linguistik Harrassowitz p 285 Friedman Victor A 2006 Balkanizing the Balkan Linguistic Sprachbund in Aichenwald et al Grammars in Contact A Cross Linguistic Typology Pages 209 Lloshi 1999 p 285 a b Meniku Linda 2008 Gheg Albanian Reader Page 7 Meniku 2008 Gheg Albanian Reader Page 7 Matasovic Ranka 2012 A Grammatical Sketch of Albanian for students of Indo European Page 42 43 Tagliavini Carlo 1942 Le parlate albanesi di tipo Ghego orientale Dardania e Macedonia nord occidentale Reale Accademia d Italia Pipa p 56 Pipa p 57 Northern Gheg is divided vertically Later this proved to be appropriate chiefly for methodological reasons seeing that Eastern Gheg is considered to be an autonomous branch Van Coetsem Frans 1980 Contributions to Historical Linguistics Issues and Materials Brill Archive ISBN 9004061304 p 274 Northeastern Geg differed greatly among themselves Pipa p 59 Martin Camaj Leonard Fox January 1984 Albanian Grammar With Exercises Chrestomathy and Glossaries Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 4 ISBN 978 3 447 02467 9 Fialuur i voghel Sccyp e ltinisct sic Small Dictionary of Albanian and Latin 1895 ShkoderBibliography editCarl Coleman Seltzer Carleton Stevens Coon Joseph Franklin Ewing 1950 The mountains of giants a racial and cultural study of the north Albanian mountain Ghegs The Museum Pipa Arshi Repishti Sami 1984 Studies on Kosova East European Monographs 155 ISBN 0880330473 Elsie Robert Albanian Dialects Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 14 April 2012 Further reading edit South Serbia Albanians Seek Community of Municipalities 13 March 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2013 South Serbia is home to 50 000 or so Albanians Presevo valley tension BBC 2 February 2001 Retrieved 24 October 2013 Initially the guerrillas publicly acknowledged objective was to protect the local ethnic Albanian population of some 70 000 people from the repressive actions of the Serb security forces The Presevo Valley of Southern Serbia alongside Kosovo The Case for Decentralisation and Minority Protection PDF Retrieved 24 October 2013 The total population of the Valley is around 86 000 inhabitants of whom around 57 000 are Albanians and the rest are Serbs and Roma Yugoslavia Serbia Offers Peace Plan For Presevo Valley Retrieved 24 October 2013 The Serbian peace proposal calls for integrating the Presevo valley s 70 000 ethnic Albanian residents into mainstream Serbian political and social life External links edit nbsp Gheg Albanian test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator Albanian Etymology ISO Documentation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gheg Albanian amp oldid 1207842417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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