Fonološke baze suškega govora – 120 let po izidu Macedonische Studien (1896) Vatroslava Oblaka
Issue Date
2016-02Author
Nikolovski, Gjoko
Publisher
University of Maribor, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
All articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License (CC-BY-NC)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The article deals with the phonological base of the Suho dialect, which
belongs to the Macedonian south-east dialect group and Serres-Lagadin
subgroup of dialects, which today are located in the northern
part of Greece, which was until 1912 part of the territory of ethnic
Macedonians. The Slovenian philologist Vatroslav Oblak in 1891-1892
studied the dialects north of Thessaloniki and wrote his Macedonische
Studien (1896), in which he described the Thessaloniki Suho dialect.
The phonological reflexes that he found in the Suho dialect supported
his theory of Thessaloniki-based Old Church Slavonic (1895). This
article presents the latest state of phonological basis of the Suho dialect
some 120 years after the publication of Oblak’s Macedonische studien. Prispevek obravnava fonološke baze suškega govora, ki spada v jugovzhodno
narečno skupino makedonskega jezika oz. v sersko-lagadinsko
podskupino govorov. Ti govori se danes nahajajo v severnem delu
Grčije, ki je bil do leta 1912 del etničnega ozemlja Makedoncev. Slovenski
filolog Vatroslav Oblak je v letih 1891/1892 raziskoval narečja
severno od Soluna in o njih napisal razpravo Macedonische Studien,
v kateri je opisal solunski suški govor. Z glasovnimi refleksi, ki jih je
našel v suškem govoru, je podprl svojo teorijo o solunski jezikovni
osnovi stare cerkvene slovanščine (1895). Prispevek prinaša najsodobnejše
stanje fonoloških baz suškega govora, in sicer 120 let po izidu
omenjenega Oblakovega dela.
ISSN
2385-8753Collections
Items in KU ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
We want to hear from you! Please share your stories about how Open Access to this item benefits YOU.