From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In Polish linguistic
tradition there are seven general dialectal groups of the Polish
language, each primarily associated with a certain
geographical region[1
]. The dialects (dialekt in Polish) are
often further subdivided into subdialectal groups called
gwara or region.
Early mediaeval tribes, from which the modern Polish dialects
descended.
The Polish language became far more homogeneous in the second
half of the 20th century, in part due to the mass migration of
several million Polish citizens from the eastern to the western
part of the country after the east was annexed by the Soviet Union in the
aftermath of World War
II. Standard Polish is still spoken somewhat differently in
different regions of the country, although the differences between
these broad "dialects" are slight. There is never any difficulty in
mutual understanding, and non-native speakers are generally unable
to distinguish among them easily. The differences are slight
compared to different dialects of English, for example.
The regional differences correspond mainly to old tribal
divisions from around a thousand years ago; the most significant of
these in terms of numbers of speakers are Greater Polish (spoken in
the west), Lesser Polish (spoken in the south and southeast),
Mazovian (Mazur) spoken throughout the central and eastern parts of
the country, and Silesian language in the southwest. Mazovian
shares some features with the Kashubian language (see below).
Traditional
division
Note that the following scheme, while often cited[2],
is also considered outdated in some parts for the reasons stated
above. Specifically most modern scholars agree that Kashubian is in
fact a separate language[3].
While most Polish linguists regard Silesian as a dialect[4]
[5],
some also argue that it is rather a language.
A map showing a different division of Polish dialects onto four
branches: the Lesser Polish, Greater Polish, Mazovian and the
New Mixed Dialects group. Silesian and Kashubian are
treated as
languages rather than
dialects.
- Greater Polish dialect, descending from the
Western Slavic language once spoken by the Polans
-
- Mazovian dialect, descending from the language
of the Mazovians[6]
-
- Lesser Polish dialect, descending from the
language of the Vistulans, is the most numerous dialectal
group in modern Poland[7].
It includes the following sub-groups
-
-
-
Two of the dialects are
often considered to be independent languages:
- Kashubian (Polish: język kaszubski, dialekt
kaszubski), refers to the language spoken in the region
of Eastern Pomerania,
often by descendants of the ancient tribe of Pomeranians.
-
-
There is also a number of dialects unrelated to the traditional
scheme descending from the ancient Western Slavic
tribal groups inhabiting the territory of modern Poland. Among the
most notable of them are the urban dialects of some of the larger
cities where Polish is (or used to be) commonly spoken. Those
include the Warsaw
dialect, the Poznań dialect, the Łódź dialect and the Lwów dialect[10].
There are also several professional dialects preserved, of which
the best known is grypsera, a language spoken by long-time
prison convicts.
References
- ^
(Polish)
Zofia Kurzowa (2007). Szpiczakowska
Monika, Skarżyński Mirosław. ed. Z przeszłości i
teraźniejszości języka polskiego. Kraków: Universitas.
pp. 726. ISBN
97883-242-0691-9.
- ^ (Polish)
Jadwiga Wronicz (March-April 2007).
"Pozycja dialektu wobec innych odmian polszczyzny". Język
polski; Organ Towarzystwa Miłośników Języka Polskiego
LXXXVII (2): 91–96.
- ^ (Polish)
Bronisław Jakubowski (1999). "Język czy dialekt?".
Wiedza i Życie (4). http://archiwum.wiz.pl/1999/99044500.asp.
- ^ (Polish)
Aldona Skudrzykowa (2002). Jolanta
Tambor. ed. Gwara Śląska - świadectwo kultury, narzędzie
komunikacji. Katowice: Śla̜sk. ISBN
83-7164-314-4.
- ^ (Polish)
various authors (2000). Bogusław
Wyderka. ed. Słownik gwar śląskich. I-IX.
Opole: Państwowy Instytut Naukowy - Instytut Śląski. ISBN
8371261373.
- ^ (Polish)
Bronisław Wieczorkiewicz (1968).
Gwara warszawska dawniej i dziś. Warsaw: Państwowy
Instytut Wydawniczy. pp. 516.
- ^ (Polish)
Stanisław Urbańczyk, ed (1992). "Dialekt małopolski".
Encyklopedia języka polskiego (II ed.).
Wrocław-Warszawa-Kraków: Ossolineum. pp. 60. http://artur.czesak.webpark.pl/Stronica/Dialmlp.html.
- ^ a
b
(Polish)
Zofia Kurzowa (2007). Szpiczakowska
Monika, Skarżyński Mirosław. ed. Ze studiów nad polszczyzną
kresową. Kraków: Universitas. pp. 518. ISBN
97883-242-0683-4.
- ^ (Polish)
Zofia Kurzowa (2006). Szpiczakowska
Monika, Skarżyński Mirosław. ed. Język polski Wileńszczyzny i
kresów północno-wschodnich. Kraków: Universitas. ISBN
83-242-0738-4.
- ^ a
b
c
(Polish)
Zofia Kurzowa (2006). Szpiczakowska
Monika, Skarżyński Mirosław. ed. Polszczyzna Lwowa i kresów
południowo-wschodnich do 1939. Kraków: UNIVERSITAS.
pp. 439. ISBN
83-242-0656-6.