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Jalov dialect

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Jalovan
Jaⱶlöviꞩ - Jaⱶlövȧ dialekt
Pronunciation/jɑː.lœ.vaˑ/ Speaker Icon.svg
Native to Walneria
EthnicityJalova Walnerians
Native speakers
L1: ~3,450
L2: ~110
FL: >50
Latin alphabet
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
19 Jalovan villages:
  • Jalov (Jaⱶlöv)
  • Cilsdorf (Zilsdorf)
  • Himperk (Hįmberg)
  • Semilë (ẞemilė)
  • Lóssice (Loⱶẜitz)
  • Ófhaim (Ąfhįm)
  • Ssloiŕ (Ꞩloiⱶr)
  • Bórkúm (Bąrkuⱶm)
  • Dítanó (Ditȧ§dorf)
Language codes
ISO 639-3
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For a guide to IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

The Jalov dialect (Jalovan: Jaⱶlövȧ dialekt; Walnerian: Jaloviss dialekt), alternatively named the Jalov language (Jalovan: Jaⱶlövȧ ẜpraⱶħ; Walnerian: Jaloviss sproch), shorthand name being Jalovan (Jalovan: Jaⱶlöviꞩ; Walnerian: Jaloviss), is considered either to be the most distinct and linguistically furthest dialect of the Walnerian language or its own language of High Dolch family.

It is primairly spoken in the area of the middle age Dolchic linguistic enclave around Jalov, currently being used in 9 villages in the region.

Linguistic island

Walnerian name Jalovan name Percentage of Jalovans Population Region
Jalov Jⱶalöv
58%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Cilsdorf Zilsdorf
93%
RezenfeldRegionFlag.png Ŕezënfeld
Himperk Hįmberg
88%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Semilë ẞemilė
68%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Lóssice Loⱶẜitz
53%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Ófhaim Ąfhįm
66%
RezenfeldRegionFlag.png Ŕezënfeld
Ssloiŕ Ꞩloiⱶr
85%
RezenfeldRegionFlag.png Ŕezënfeld
Bórkúm Bąrkuⱶm
90%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Dítanó Ditȧ§dorf
78%
RezenfeldRegionFlag.png Ŕezënfeld
Libice Lįbitz
44%
LomaneRegionFlag.png Lómane
Rálskov Raⱶlßką
42%
RezenfeldRegionFlag.png Ŕezënfeld

Alphabet

The Jalovan dialect uses its own orthography.

A a Ȧ ȧ Ä ä Ą ą B b C c D d E e Ė ė F f
G g H h Ħ ħ I i Į į J j K k L l M m
N n O o Ö ö P p Q q R r S ſ s Ꞩ ẜ ꞩ ẞ ß § T t
U u V v W w X x Y y Z z

Phonology

Order 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
Majuscule A Ȧ Ä Ą B C D E Ė F G H Ħ I Į J K L M N O Ö P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Minuscule a ȧ ä ą b c d e ė f g h ħ i į j k l m n o ö p q r ſ s ß § t u v w x y z
IPA Sound a
ɑ

ɑˑ
æ ã
ɑ̃
b k d ɛ
e
ə
◌̩
f ɡ h
ɦ
x ◌ː i
ɪ
ĩ
ɪ̃
j k l m n ɔ
o
œ
ø
p k͡v r z s ʃ
ɕ
t u f v k͡s y
t͡s

Letters S and its miniscules

Sſs Ꞩẜꞩ ẞߧ
Sſs Ꞩẜꞩ ẞߧ

The letter S and its derivatives have two miniscule variants, which are used depending on their location in the word. Unlike Walnerian language, which has preserved the miniscule differentiation only within the Fraktur orthography, Jalovan alphabet uses the miniscule differentiation independent of the script used.

The miniscules are often named the "Short" (kurz) and "Long" (lang), and are written by the following rule:

  • Long S (ſ; ẜ; ß) is written on the beggining or the middle of a syllable
    • Example: Raiſe; Maẜiⱶne; Roⱶße
  • Short S (s; ꞩ; §) is written on the end of a syllable, or in foreign loanwords and interjections
    • Example: Mesnįg; Voⱶꞩsain; Moⱶ§

Letters H and its derivatives

Hh Ħħ Ⱶⱶ
Hh Ħħ Ⱶⱶ

TBA

Grammar

TBA

Examples

TBA