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Souletin dialect

Dialect of Basque spoken in France


Summary

Dialect of Basque spoken in France

FieldValue
nameSouletin
altnameZuberoan
nativenameZuberera
regionSoule, France
speakers
ref
date1991
familycolorgrey
fam1Basque (language isolate)
mapZuberera.svg
mapcaption
isoexceptiondialect
iso3bsz
iso3comment(deprecated for in 2007)
glottobasq1250
glottorefnameBasque, Souletin

Souletin or Zuberoan () is the Basque dialect spoken in Soule, France. Souletin is marked by influences from Occitan (in particular the Béarnese dialect), especially in the lexicon. Another distinct characteristic is the use of xuka verb forms, a form of address including in third person verbs the interlocutor marker embedded in the auxiliary verb: jin da → jin düxü (s/he came → s/he came to you).

Name

In English sources, the Basque-based term Zuberoan is sometimes encountered. In Standard Basque, the dialect is known as zuberera (the province name Zuberoa and the language-forming suffix -era). Various local forms are üskara, xiberera and xiberotarra. In French, it is known as souletin. In Spanish, the dialect is called souletino or suletino.

Distribution

The southern dialect Roncalese was sometimes included within Zuberoan. A Basque language variety close to Zuberoan may have extended more to the east, into the Central Pyrenees, as attested by placenames and historical records about the Basque peoples ( in the Royal Frankish Annals).

Phonology

LabialLamino-dentalApico-alveolarPalatal/
PostalveolarVelarGlottalNasalStopaspiratedvoicelessvoicedAffricatevoicelessFricativevoicelessvoicedLateralRhotic
FrontCentralBackunroundedroundedCloseMidOpen
()

|}

In addition to the five vowels present in all other Basque dialects, Zuberoan also has a close front rounded vowel (written ü), which is markedly noticeable to speakers of other varieties. All six vowels can be nasalized ( is absent in some Souletin varieties), with nasalization being phonemic. It is likely that the sixth vowel arose influenced by the Béarnese vowel shift some centuries ago instead of being an ancient vowel lost in other dialects of Basque.

Souletin features the voiceless aspirated stops , which contrast with their unaspirated counterparts. The alveolar tap present in other dialects has been lost in Souletin. The voiced fricatives are found almost exclusively in loanwords, they are present in other varieties only as allophones of their unvoiced counterparts. The phoneme (written as j) corresponds to in other varieties. The voiceless nasal glottal approximant is found exclusively in intervocalic position, and triggers the nasalization of the adjoining vowels.

Example

This example of the "Orreaga" ballad composed by Arturo Campion shows some differences between this dialect and the standard Basque (Euskara batua).

ZuberoanWritten around 1880 by Emmanuel Intxauspe.Euskara batua (Standard Basque)
I
Gaiherdi da.I
Gauerdia da.

Notes

References

Citations

Sources

References

  1. {{e15. bsz. Souletin
  2. (2020). "bsz {{!}} ISO 639-3". SIL International.
  3. (2008). "Etymological Dictionary of Basque". University of Sussex.
  4. Campion, A (1971). [https://books.google.com/books?id=f4UCAAAAQAAJ ''Orreaga. Balada escrita en el dialecto guipuzcoano, acompañada de versiones a los dialectos bizcaino, labortano y suletino y de diez y ocho variedades dialectales de la region bascongada de Nabarra desde Olazagutia hasta Roncal''], Separated edition of the La Gran Enciclopedia Vasca, pg 33.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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