Chemnitz dialect
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Chemnitz dialect is a distinct German dialect of the city of Chemnitz and an urban variety of Vorerzgebirgisch, a variant of Upper Saxon German.
Phonology
Consonants
- /m, p/ are bilabial, whereas /f, ʋ/ are labiodental.
- /n, t, l, s/ are dental .
- /t/ is alveolar after /ʃ/.
- /ŋ, kʰ, k/ are velar, /χ, ʁ/ are uvular, and /j/ is palatal. /χ-ʁ/ do not constitute a voiceless-voiced pair.
- The /kʰ–k/ contrast is restricted to the word-initial position. In many cases, it corresponds to the /k–ɡ/ contrast in Standard German.
- /ʁ/ occurs only in onsets, and it has a few possible pronunciations, which are in free variation with one another:
- Voiced uvular approximant ;
- Voiced or voiceless lenis uvular fricative;
- Voiceless uvular trill ;
- Voiceless lenis uvular stop .
- /p, t, k, f, s, ʃ, χ/ may be voiced between sonorants.
- Word-final /p, t, k/ are sometimes voiced to .
- Word-initially, the /t–k/ contrast is neutralized before /l/, which means that e.g. the word Kleid ('dress') can be pronounced as either or .
- When a stop or fricative precedes, the sequences /əm, ən, əŋ, əl/ can be realized as syllabic consonants . The nasals appear depending on the place of articulation of the preceding consonant, so that it can be bilabial , dental , velar or uvular .
- When another nasal precedes a syllabic nasal, such sequence is realized as a single consonant of variable length.
- Non-phonemic glottal stop is inserted in two cases:
- Before word-initial vowels, even the unstressed ones.
- Before stressed syllable-initial vowels within words.
Vowels
Monophthongs of the Chemnitz dialect, from
Khan & Weise (2013:236–237). Red vowels are
pharyngealized.
- The pharyngealized vowels correspond to the sequences of vowel + /r/ in the standard language.
- The non-native vowels are occasionally used in cognates of some Standard German words, such as brüder ('brothers'). In other cases, they are pronounced the same as /ɪ, iː, ɛ, eː/.
- Unstressed short oral monophthongs may fall together as .
- /ʊˤː, oˤː, ʌˤː, ɔˤː, aˤː/ are often diphthongal in careful speech. Monophthongal realizations are optionally shortened in certain positions.
- /oˤ/ corresponds to Standard German .
- Monophthongs are somewhat retracted when they precede dorsals, except /j/. The retraction is strongest before /χ, ʁ/. To a certain extent, this is also true of monophthongs that follow dorsal consonants.
- Monophthongs are allophonically pharyngealized if a vowel in the following syllable is pharyngealized.
- The phonetic quality of the monophthongs is as follows:
- /iː, ʉː, ɵ, ɵː, ʊˤː/ are close to the canonical values of the corresponding IPA symbols .
- /ɪ/ is close-mid .
- /eː, ɛ, ɛː, oˤ, oˤː, ɔˤː/ are more central than the canonical values of the corresponding IPA symbols: .
- /ɞ/ is mid .
- /ʌˤː/ is mid near-back .
- /ʌ, ʌː/ are central .
- /aˤː/ is near-open near-front .
Diphthongs of the Chemnitz dialect, from
Khan & Weise (2013:237).
- The starting point of /ɞʏ/ is higher and more front than the canonical value of the corresponding IPA symbol ().
- The starting points of /ae/ and /aɵ/ are higher and more central than the canonical value of the corresponding IPA symbol ().
- The ending points of Chemnitz German diphthongs are close to the canonical values of the corresponding IPA symbols ().
Sample
The sample text is a reading of the first sentence of The North Wind and the Sun.
Broad phonetic transcription
Orthographic version (standard German)
Eines Tages haben sich der Nordwind und die Sonne gezankt, wer von den beiden denn nun der Stärkere ist, als ein Wanderer mit einem warmen Mantel an, vorbeikam.
References
Bibliography