Samogitian
Encyclopedia : S : SA : SAM : Samogitian
Samogitian is the dialect of Lithuanian language spoken in Samogitia, i.e. the west part of Lithuania.
History
Until the end of 19th century the nowaday Samogitians are mentioned only as the Western Samogitians; the last are considered by scientists to be the descendents of lithuanised (or samogitised) Semigallians (for Southern subdialect of Samogitian) and Curonians (for Northern and Western subdialects of Samogitian).Linguistic differences with Standard Lithuanian
Samogitian differs from Standard Lithuanian in phonetics, lexicon, and morphology. Some words and verb tenses also differs in Samogtian (e.g., in Lithuanian the Past Frequent tense, meaning that action used to be done in past repeatedly, is made by removing the ending of verb and adding "davo" (miršta - mirdavo, pūva - pūdavo), while in Samogitian word "Liuob" is added instead before the word).Samogitian also has many words and figures of speech that are altogether different from Standard Lithuanian. E.g. kiuocis - basket (Lith. krepšys), tevs - thin (Lith. plonas), rebas - ribs (Lith. šonkauliai, grobai), a jebentas! - "can't be!" (Lith. negali būti!) and many more.
Subdialects
Samogitian is also divided into three major subdialects: Northern Samogitian (spoken in Telšiai and Kretinga regions), Western Samogitian (was spoken in the region around Klaipėda, now nearly extinct,- after the Soviet occupation in 1945, many people were expelled and new ones came to this region) and Southern Samogitian (spoken in Varniai, Kelmė, Tauragė and Raseiniai regions). Historically, these are classified by their pronunciation of the Lithuanian word Duona, "bread." They are referred to as Dounininkai (from Douna), Donininkai (from Dona) and Dūnininkai (from Dūna.).Political situation
The Samogitian is rapidly declining: It is not used in the local school system and there is only one quarterly magazine and no television or radio broadcasts in Samogitian. Local newspapers and broadcast stations use standard Lithuanian instead. There is no new literature in Samogitian either, as authors prefer standard Lithuanian for its accessibility to a larger audience. Out of those people who speak Samogitian only a few can understand its written form well.Migration of Samogitian speakers to other parts of the country and migration into Samogitia have reduced contact between Samogitian speakers, and therefore the level of fluency of those speakers.
There are attempts by the Samogitian Cultural Society to stem the loss of the dialect. The council of Telšiai city put marks with Samogitian name for the city at the roads leading to the city. A new system for writing Samogitian was created.
Writing system
The first use of a unique writing system for Samogitian was in the Interwar period, however it was neglected during the period of Soviet occupation, so only elderly people knew how to write in Samogitian at the time Lithuania regained independence. The Samogitian Cultural Society renewed the system to make it more usable.The writing system uses the same letters as standard Lithuanian, but with the following differences:
- There are no nasal vowels. (letters with ogoneks: ą, ę, į, ų)
- There are three additional long vowels, written with macrons above: ā, ō, ē (the same as in Latvian).
- Long i in Samogitian is written with a macron above: ī (unlike standard Lithuanian where it is y).
- The long vowel ė is written as o with tilde above (õ). In fact it is writing like ė with macron:
Ė̅ and ė̅ . [link] - There are two additional diphthongs in Samogitian that are written as digraphs: ou and ėi. (The component letters are part of the standard Lithuanian alphabet.)
A Samogitian computer keyboard layout has been created.
Samogitian alphabet:
A a, Ā ā, B b, C c, Č č, D d, E e, Ē ē, Ė ė, Õ õ, F f, G g, H h, I i, Ī ī, J j, K k, L l, M m, N n, O o, Ō ō, P p, R r, S s, Š š, T t, U u, Ū ū, V v, Z z, Ž ž
Audio sample
- [Apie ubagus ir jų giesmės ("About beggars and their hymns")] ([file info])
- *
- * Problems listening to the file? See [Media helpmedia help].
External links
| Baltic languages | ||
|---|---|---|
| Curonian | Galindian | Latgalian | Latvian | Lithuanian | Old Prussian | Samogitian | Selonian | Semigallian | Sudovian | ||
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
