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Vivaro-Alpine dialect

Variety of the Occitan language


Summary

Variety of the Occitan language

FieldValue
nameVivaro-Alpine
nativenamevivaroaupenc
statesFrance, Italy
regionSouthern France, Occitan Valleys
speakers?
familycolorIndo-European
fam2Italic
fam3Latino-Faliscan
fam4Latin
fam5Romance
fam6Italo-Western
fam7Western Romance
fam8Gallo-Iberian?
fam9(disputed)
fam10Occitano-Romance?
fam11Occitan
fam12Provençal?
dia1Mentonasc
dia2Gardiol
isoexceptiondialect
ietf
linglist08e
glotto2viva1235
glottorefname2Vivaro-Alpine Occitan
lingua51-AAA-gf & 51-AAA-gg
mapDistribucion del dialècte vivaroalpenc.png
mapcaptionMap of Vivaro-Alpine dialect.
map2Lang Status 60-DE.svg
mapcaption2

Vivaro-Alpine (, vivaroaupenc; , ) is a variety of Occitan spoken in southeastern France (namely, around the Dauphiné area) and northwestern Italy (the Occitan Valleys of Piedmont and Liguria). There is also a small Vivaro-Alpine enclave in the Guardia Piemontese, Calabria, where the language is known as Gardiol , which Glottolog recognizes as a distinct language within the Occitanic language family. It belongs to the Northern Occitan dialect bloc, along with Auvergnat and Limousin. The name “vivaro-alpine” was coined by Pierre Bec in the 1970s. The Vivaro-Alpine dialects are traditionally called "gavot" from the Maritime Alps to the Hautes-Alpes.

Naming and classification

Vivaro-Alpine had been considered as a sub-dialect of Provençal, and named provençal alpin (Alpine Provençal) or Northern Provençal.

Its use in the Dauphiné area has also led to the use of dauphinois or dauphinois alpin to name it. Along with Ronjat it is now clearly recognized as a dialect of its own.

The UNESCO Atlas of World's languages in danger uses the Alpine Provençal name, and considers it as seriously endangered.

Subdialects

  • Western: vivarodaufinenc (native name) or vivaro-dauphinois (French name) near northern Vivarais (Annonay), northeastern Velay (Yssingeaux), a southern fringe of Forez (Saint-Bonnet-le-Château and around Saint-Étienne), Drôme department (Valence, Die, Montélimar) and a fringe in southern Isère department.
  • Eastern: Alpine (English name) or alpenc, aupenc (native name), in the Occitan Alps.
    • gavòt (native name) or gavot (French name) in the western Occitan Alps, which are located in France, around Digne, Sisteron, Gap, Barcelonnette and the upper County of Nice.
    • Cisalpine or Eastern Alpine (native names: cisalpenc or alpenc oriental) in the eastern Occitan Alps Occitan Valleys, which are located in Italy (Piedmont and Liguria).

Characterization

Vivaro-Alpine is classified as an Indo-European, Italic, Romance, or Western-Romance language.

Vivaro-Alpine shares the palatization of consonants k and g in front of a with the other varieties of North Occitan (Limosino, Alverniate), in particular with words such as chantar ("cantare", to sing) and jai ("ghiandaia", jay). Southern Occitan has, respectively, cantar and gai.

Its principal characteristic is the dropping of simple Latin dental intervocalics:

  • chantaa or chantaia for chantada ("cantata", sung),
  • monea for moneda ("moneta", coin),]
  • bastia or bastiá for bastida ("imbastitura", tack),
  • maür for madur ("maturo", mature).

The verbal ending of the first person is -o (like in Italian, Catalan, Castilian, and Portuguese, but also in Piemontese, which is neighboring): parlo for parli or parle ("io parlo"), parlavo for parlavi or parlave ("io parlavo"), parlèro for parlèri or parlère ("io ho parlato, io parlavo").

A common trait is the rhotacism of l (shift from l to r):

  • barma for balma or bauma ("grotta", cave),
  • escòra for escòla ("scuola", school),
  • saraa or sarai for salada ("insalata", salad).

In the dialects of the Alps, Vivaro-Alpine maintained the pronunciation of the r of the infinitive verbs (excepting modern Occitan).

An estimated 70% of languages are estimated to have "interrogative intonation contours which end with rising pitch." However, Vivaro Alpine follows the opposite pattern with yes/no questions—an initial high tone followed by a fall. Questions that end in a rising pitch are so common that they are often considered "natural." One reason that questions begin with a high tone in some languages is that the listener is immediately being alerted to the fact that they are being asked a question.

Status

Vivaro-Alpine is an endangered language. There are approximately 200,000 native speakers of the language worldwide. Transmission of the language is very low. Speakers of Vivaro-Alpine typically also speak either French or Italian.

References

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald. (2022-05-24). "Glottolog 4.8 - Shifted Western Romance". [[Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology]].
  2. {{in lang. fr Jean-Marie Klinkenberg, ''Des langues romanes. Introduction aux études de linguistique romane'', De Boeck, 2e édition, 1999,
  3. ''La langue se divise en trois grandes aires dialectales : le nord-occitan (limousin, auvergnat, vivaro-alpin), l'occitan moyen, qui est le plus proche de la langue médiévale (languedocien et provençal au sens restreint), et le gascon (à l'ouest de la Garonne).'' in {{in lang. fr [http://www.larousse.fr/encyclopedie/nom-commun-nom/occitan_%28%29_De_l_Occitanie/74321 Encyclopédie Larousse]
  4. {{Glottolog. gard1245. Gardiol
  5. Bec, Pierre. (1995). "La langue occitane.".
  6. Belasco, Simon. (1990). "France's Rich Relation: The Oc Connection.". The French Review.
  7. {{in lang. fr Jean-Claude Bouvier, "L'occitan en Provence : limites, dialectes et variété" in ''Revue de linguistique romane'' 43, pp 46-62
  8. {{in lang. fr Jules Ronjat, ''Grammaire istorique des parlers provençaux modernes, vol. IV Les dialectes'', [[Montpellier]], 1941
  9. and Bec,{{in lang. fr Pierre Bec, ''La langue occitane'', Paris, 1995
  10. link. (February 22, 2009)
  11. "The Endangered Languages Project".
  12. (10 May 2013}}{{Dead link). "Dizionario Italiano-Occitano".
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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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