Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Gipuzkoan dialect





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  


(Redirected from Guipuscoan Basque)
 


Gipuzkoan (Basque: Gipuzkera; Spanish: Guipuzcoano) is a dialect of the Basque language spoken mainly in the central and eastern parts of the province of GipuzkoainBasque Country and also in the northernmost part of Navarre. It is a central dialect of Basque according to the traditional dialectal classification of the language based on research carried out by Lucien Bonaparte in the 19th century. He included varieties spoken in the Sakana and Burunda valleys also in the Gipuzkoan dialect, however this approach has been disputed by modern Basque linguists.

Gipuzkoan
Gipuzkera
Native toSpain
RegionGipuzkoa, Navarre

Language family

Basque (language isolate)

  • Gipuzkoan

Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologguip1235
IETFeu-u-sd-esss

Area

edit

Gipuzkoan is spoken not in all of Gipuzkoa but in the area between the Deba River and the River Oiartzun. The strip of Gipuzkoa from Leintz-GatzagatoElgoibar is part of the Biscayan (Western) dialect area, and the River Oiartzun flowing past Errenteria outlines the border with the Upper Navarrese dialect. However, borders between Gipuzkoan and High Navarrese are gradually disappearing, as Standard Basque is beginning to blur the differences among traditional dialects, especially for younger Basques.

Features

edit
 
Regional realizations of ⟨j⟩.

Some of the features of Gipuzkoan, as perceived by speakers of other dialect, are the following:

Variants

edit

Gipuzkoan had four main variants:

Historical role

edit

Gipuzkoan is one of the four dialects known as the literary dialects of Basque (Biscayan, Lapurdian, Souletin and Gipuzkoan). It was used in Basque literature from the 17th century onward, but like Souletin and Biscayan, it had only a minor role because of the Lapurdian dialect's dominance. That was because the centre of Basque literary production was in Labourd from the 16th century to most of the 18th century.

Source of Standard Basque

edit

Gipuzkoan vocabulary was used as the main source for Standard Basque, the standardised dialect of Basque that is used in schools and the media.

See also

edit

References

edit

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gipuzkoan_dialect&oldid=1124192290"
 



Last edited on 27 November 2022, at 20:02  





Languages

 


Aragonés
Català
Español
Euskara
Français
Galego
Hrvatski
Latina
Occitan
Polski
Português
Vèneto
 

Wikipedia


This page was last edited on 27 November 2022, at 20:02 (UTC).

Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



Privacy policy

About Wikipedia

Disclaimers

Contact Wikipedia

Code of Conduct

Developers

Statistics

Cookie statement

Terms of Use

Desktop