Lach dialects

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File:Lach Silesian dialect and Cieszyn Silesian dialect.png
Map showing the distribution of the Lachian dialects (west) and the Cieszyn Silesian dialect (east) in the Czech-Polish-Slovak borderlands.Template:Imagefact
File:Polskie Morawy.png
Former Lach speaking places in modern-day Poland (yellow, percentage as of 1910)

The Lach dialects, also known as Lachian dialects (Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx), are a group of West Slavic dialects that form a transition between the Polish and Czech language. They are spoken in parts of Czech Silesia, the Hlučín Region, and northeastern Moravia,[1] as well as in some adjacent villages in Poland.[2] Most Czech researchersScript error: No such module "Unsubst". consider Lach a dialect of Czech, whereas Polish dialectologistsScript error: No such module "Unsubst". tend to ascribe Polish origins to Lach.[3]

Lachian is divided into numerous subdialects (Western, Eastern and Southern), it can therefore also be regarded as a dialect continuum, with limited mutual intelligibility between the eastern and western dialects.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". This dialectal differentiation is not typical for the Czech Republic, where there is a good deal of dialect leveling, especially in the west of the republic.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Most Lachs, especially younger speakers, now speak standard Czech, and use it as a written language, while Lach remains the language of everyday speech. Lachian contains many German loanwords, according to some sources,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". up to 8% of the vocabulary.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The poet Óndra Łysohorsky is probably the best-known writer in Lachian. Łysohorsky was notable for refusing to write in Standard Czech, instead writing in the local dialect of Upper Silesia. In doing so, he contributed significantly to the development of the Lach literary language.[4]

Example text

Example text (Óndra Łysohorsky)[5]
Lach Czech Polish English
Lašsky jazyk, w širokych rysach, je młuva ludu w sewerowychodnej Morawě, w starym "Rakuskym Ślónsku" a w Hučinsku. Od zapadniho jazyka českeho a połedniho jazyka slowénskeho śe rozeznowo hławně akcéntém na předostatni słabice, od wychodniho jazyka polskeho hławně ňedostatkém nosowych samohłosek Lašský jazyk, v širokých rysech, je řeč lidí na severovýchodní Moravě, ve starém "Rakouském Slezsku" a na Hlučínsku. Od západního jazyka českého a jižního jazyka slovenského se rozezná hlavně akcentem na předposlední slabice, od východního jazyka polského hlavně nepřitomností nosových samohlásek Język laski, w szerokim zarysie, to mowa ludu na północno-wschodnich Morawach, na starym "Śląsku Austriackim" i na ziemi hulczyńskiej. Od zachodniego języka czeskiego i południowego języka słowackiego różni się przede wszystkim akcentem na przedostatnią sylabę. Od wschodniego języka polskiego w szczególności nieobecnością nosowych samogłosek. The Lachian language, generally characterised, is the speech of the people of northeastern Moravia, old "Austrian Silesia", and the Hlučín district. It is distinguished from the Czech language in the west and the Slovak language in the south chiefly by the stress on the penultimate syllable, from the Polish language in the east chiefly by the absence of nasal vowels.

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. Hannan 1996, 726.
  2. Hannan 1996, 730.
  3. S. Bąk, Mowa polska na Śląsku, Wrocław and Warsaw 1974.
  4. Hannan 1996, 726.
  5. Hannan 1996, 726.

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References

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