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The Lausberg area is a part of southern Italy, covering much of Basilicata and the northern edge of Calabria, where Southern Italian dialects are spoken that show vowel developments atypical of Italo-Romance. The area is named after Heinrich Lausberg, who brought it to the attention of scholarship in 1939.[1]

Approximate isogloss lines.

Stressed vowel outcomes

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There are three main subdivisions, as can be seen on the map to the right.

Romanian-like

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Vowel changes from Latin to (Proto-)Romanian

Dubbed the Vorposten (“outpost”) by Lausberg, this area encompasses the towns of Castelmezzano, Potenza, and Picerno. Here the Latin vowel /i/ merged with /eː/, while /u/ merged with /uː/. The same asymmetric vowel development characterizes Balkan Romance languages such as Romanian.[1]

Transitional

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Vowel changes from Latin to Sicilian

The western part of Lausberg's Mittelzone (“central area”) encompasses the towns of Lauria, Maratea, Scalea, Diamante, and Verbicaro. Here the majority of words show a stressed vowel development similar to that of Sicilian, although many words show Sardinian-like outcomes as well.[2]

Sardinian-like

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Vowel changes from Latin to Sardinian

The eastern part of the Mittelzone encompasses the towns of Senise, Tursi, and Oriolo. Here the tonic vowels developed approximately as in Sardinian. There is evidence, however, of an earlier distinction between Latin /eː oː/ and /e o/. In the variety spoken in Senise, for instance, the outcomes of Latin /e/ and /o/ were subject to diphthongization when stressed and followed by a syllable containing a close vowel (namely /i/ or /u/), while the outcomes of /eː/ and /oː/ were not. Cf. Latin /fokum, nepoːteːs/ > */ˈfɔku, neˈpoti/ > [ˈfwokə, nəˈpʊtə].[3]

Selected lexical comparisons

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Below are the (non-metaphonic) stressed vowel outcomes in the three regions,[2] each represented here by one dialect.

Latin ˈfiːlum ˈniwem ˈteːlam ˈpedem ˈpaːnem ˈkanem ˈkor ˈsoːlem ˈkrukem ˈluːnam
Castelmezzano ˈfilə ˈnevə ˈtela ˈperə ˈpanə ˈkanə ˈkorə ˈsolə ˈkrutʃə ˈlunə
Verbicaro ˈfɪlə ˈnɪva ˈtɪla ˈpɛtra ˈpanə ˈkanə ˈkɔrə ˈsʊlə ˈkrʊtʃa ˈlʊna
Senise ˈfilə ˈnivə ˈtɛlə ˈpɛrə ˈpanə ˈkanə ˈkɔrə ˈsɔlə ˈkrutʃə ˈlunə
English thread snow canvas foot bread dog heart sun cross moon

Here is a comparison of the present indicative conjugations of the verb meaning “to die” in the Mittelzone.[4] Asterisks indicate forms that induce syntactic doubling.

San Chirico Aliano Castelluccio Noepoli Amendolara Papasidero
1SG ˈmɔrə ˈmɔrəjə ˈmɔrəkə ˈmɔrə~ˈmuərə ˈmɔrrə ˈmɔru
2SG ˈmwerəsə ˈmɔrəsə ˈmuːrəsə ˈmuərəsə ˈmuːrəsə ˈmuːrisi
3SG ˈmwerətə ˈmɔrətə ˈmurə* ˈmuərədə ˈmuːrədə ˈmuri*
1PL muˈriəmə muˈrɛmə muˈrimə muˈriəmə muˈrimə muˈrimu
2PL muˈriəsə muˈrɛsə muˈrisə muˈriətəsə muˈritəsə muˈrisi
3PL ˈmɔrənə ˈmɔrənə ˈmɔrənə ˈmɔrənə ˈmuːrənə ˈmɔrunu

Notes

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References

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  1. ^ a b Loporcaro 2011, p. 114
  2. ^ a b Ledgeway 2016, p. 248
  3. ^ Loporcaro 2011, p. 113
  4. ^ Trumper 1997, p. 362

Bibliography

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  • Lausberg, Heinrich (1939). Die mundarten Südlukaniens (in German). Halle: Niemeyer.
  • Loporcaro, Michele (2011). "Phonological processes". In Maiden, Martin; Smith, John Charles; Ledgeway, Adam (eds.). The Cambridge history of the Romance languages. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 109–154.
  • Ledgeway, Adam (2016). "The dialects of southern Italy". In Ledgeway, Adam; Maiden, Martin (eds.). The Oxford guide to the Romance languages. Oxford University Press. pp. 246–269.
  • Trumper, John (1997). "Calabria and southern Basilicata". In Maiden, Martin; Parry, Mair (eds.). The dialects of Italy. London: Routledge. pp. 355–364.