The beginning of the divergent evolution of the žemaitian dialect
Articles
Aleksas Girdenis
Vilnius University image/svg+xml
Published 2026-01-28
https://doi.org/10.15388/baltistica.28.2.240
PDF

Keywords

dialectology
žemaičiai

How to Cite

Girdenis, A. (tran.) (2026) “The beginning of the divergent evolution of the žemaitian dialect”, Baltistica, 28(2), p. 5—20. doi:10.15388/baltistica.28.2.240.

Abstract

Proceeding with presumptions and conclusions expressed earlier [Girdenis, 1971; 1992a], an attempt is made to show that the Žemaitian (especially North Žemaitian) dia­lect has preserved a number of word-ending phenomena, the stratification and relative chronology of which approximates the linguistic dating of dialectal divergence to archaeologic dating (cf. Tautavičius, 1981).

Žemaitians (or so-called Samogitians) with respect to their language started drifting away from the future Aukštaitians (High Lithuanians) not later than in the VIIth centu­ry (ca. 700 A.D.), i.e. at the time when the Common East Baltic was splitting into separa­te tribal languages. One of those languages was Žemaitian, and it turned into a dialect of the Lithuanian much later - by the processes of linguistics convergence which began and was going on under the conditions of the consolidated Lithuanian state.

PDF
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 2 3 4 5 6 > >>