Slavomolisano dialect

Slavomolisano, also known as Molise Slavic or Molise Croatian (Moliški hrvatski; croato molisano), is a variety of Shtokavian Croatian spoken by Italian Croats in three villages – Montemitro (Mundimitar), Acquaviva Collecroce (Živavoda Kruč) and San Felice del Molise (Štifilić) – in the province of Campobasso, in the Molise Region of southern Italy. There are fewer than 1,000 active speakers, and fewer than 2,000 passive speakers.

It has been preserved since a group of Croats emigrated from Dalmatia due to the advancing Ottoman Turks. The residents of these villages speak a Shtokavian Younger Ikavian dialect with a strong Southern Chakavian adstratum. The Molise Croats consider themselves to be Slavic Italians, with South Slavic heritage and who speak a Slavic language, rather than simply ethnic Slavs or Croats. Some speakers call themselves Zlavi or Harvati and call their language simply na našo ("our language").

History
According to evidence Croats arrived in Molise in the early 16th century. The documents from the episcopal archive of Termoli indicate that Molise Croats arrived 1518 in Stifilić (San Felice). A stone inscription on the church in Palata, destroyed in 1930s, read Hoc Primum Dalmatiae Gentis Incoluere Castrum Ac Fundamentis Erexere Templum Anno 1531 (Residents of Dalmatia first settled the town and founded the church in 1531). The absence of any Turkish word additionally proves this dating.

The language of Molise Croats is considered to be important because of its archaism, preserved old folk songs and tradition. The basic vocabulary was done by Milan Rešetar (in monography), Agostina Piccoli (along Antonio Sammartino, Snježana Marčec and Mira Menac-Mihalić) in Rječnik moliškohrvatskoga govora Mundimitra (Dizionario dell' idioma croato-molisano di Montemitro), and Dizionario croato molisano di Acquaviva Collecroce, the grammar Gramatika moliškohrvatskoga jezika  (Grammatica della lingua croato-molisana), as well work Jezik i porijeklo stanovnika slavenskih naseobina u pokrajini Molise by Anita Sujoldžić, Božidar Finka, Petar Šimunović and Pavao Rudan.

The language of Molise Croats belongs to Younger Ikavian dialect of Western Shtokavian, with many features and lexemes of Southern Chakavian dialect. The lexicon comparison points to the similarity with language of Sumartin on Brač, Sućuraj on Hvar, and Račišće on Korčula, settlements founded almost in the same time as those in Molise, and together point to the similarity of several settlements in Southwestern Istria (see Southwestern Istrian dialect), formed by the population of Makarska hinterland and Western Herzegovina.

Giacomo Scotti noted that the ethnic identity and language was preserved in San Felice, Montemitro and Acquaviva Collecroce only thanks to the geographical and transport distance of the villages from the sea. Josip Smodlaka noted that during his visit in the early 20th century the residents of Palata still knew the Croatian for basic terms like home and field work, but if the conversation touched more complex concepts they had to use the Italian language.

The language is taught in primary schools and the signs in villages are bilingual. However, the sociolinguistic status of the language differs among the three villages where it is spoken: in San Felice del Molise, it is spoken only by old people, whereas in Acquaviva Collecroce it is also spoken by young adults and adolescents, and in Montemitro it is spoken even by children, generally alongside Italian.

Features

 * The analytic do + genitive replaces the synthetic independent genitive. In Italian it is del- + noun, since Italian has lost all its cases.
 * do replaced by od.
 * Disappearance of the neuter gender for nouns. Most neuter nouns have become masculine instead under the influence of Italian, and their unstressed final vowels have almost universally lowered to . In the Montemitro dialect, however, all neuter nouns have become masculine, and vowel lowering has not occurred.
 * Some feminine -i- stem nouns have become masculine. Those that have not have instead gained a final -a and joined the -a- stem inflectional paradigm. Thus feminine kost, "bone", has become masculine but retained its form, while feminine stvar, "thing", has become stvarḁ but retained its gender.
 * Simplification of declension classes. All feminine nouns have the same case inflection paradigm, and all masculine nouns have one of two case inflection paradigms (animate or inanimate).
 * Only the nominative, dative, and accusative cases can be used in their bare forms (without prepositions), and even then only when expressing the syntactic roles of subject, direct object, or recipient.
 * Loss of the locative case.
 * Slavic verb aspect is preserved, except in the past tense imperfective verbs are attested only in the Slavic imperfect (bihu, they were), and perfective verbs only in the perfect (je izaša, he has come out). There is no colloquial imperfect in the modern West South Slavic languages. Italian has aspect in the past tense that works in a similar fashion (impf. portava, "he was carrying", versus perf. ha portato, "he has carried", and portò, "he carried").
 * Slavic conjunctions replaced by Italian or local ones: ke, "what" (Cr. što, also ke - Cr. da, "that", It. che); e, oš, "and" (Cr i, It. e); ma, "but" (Cr. ali, no, It. ma); se, "if" (Cr. ako, It. se).
 * An indefinite article is in regular use: na, often written 'na, possibly derived from earlier jedna, "one", via Italian una.
 * Structural changes in genders. Notably, njevog does not agree with the possessor's gender (Cr. njegov or njezin, his or her). Italian suo and its forms likewise does not, but with the object's gender instead.
 * As in Italian, the perfective enclitic auxiliary verb is tightly bound to the past participle and always stands before it: je izaša, "is let loose" (Cr. facul. je izašao or izašao je), Italian è rilasciato.
 * Devoicing or loss of final short vowels, thus e.g. mlěko > mblikḁ, "milk", more > mor, "sea", nebo > nebḁ, "sky".

Consonants
The consonant system of Molise Slavic is as follows, with parenthesized consonants indicating sounds that appear only as allophones:


 * Unlike the standard Croatian lects, there are no alveolo-palatal phonemes and  (ć and đ), as they have largely merged with the palato-alveolar  and  (č and dž). However, in cases where standard Croatian  reflects Proto-Slavic *jt, the corresponding phoneme in Molise Slavic is instead . In some cases standard  corresponds to Molise, as in Chakavian.
 * ,, , , , and appear mostly in loanwords.
 * The velar fricative is inserted by some speakers between vowels to eliminate hiatus; some speakers use  in this role instead. Rarely,  can appear as an intervocalic allophone of.
 * is realized as before velar plosives.
 * A prothetic is regularly inserted before initial.
 * A adjacent to a vowel is realized as a . Etymologically, it derives from a  next to an unvoiced plosive; thus standard Croatian  (‘thing’) corresponds to Molise Slavic.
 * Some speakers realize as,  as , and  as.
 * After a short vowel, the following consonant may optionally be geminated.

Vowels
The vocalic system of Molise Slavic has seven distinct vowel qualities, as follows:


 * Besides these vowels, there is also a syllabic that functions as a vowel. Some speakers insert an epenthetic  before the  instead of pronouncing the  as syllabic.
 * There are two tones, rising and falling. A falling tone can be found only on single stressed initial syllables. A rising tone spreads over two equally-stressed syllables (or one stressed followed by one more stressed), except in cases where the second syllable has been lost. If the second syllable is long, some speakers only stress the second syllable.
 * An opposition exists between long and short vowels, but only in stressed position. Vowels with a falling tone are sometimes long, and the second vowel with a rising tone is always long unless it is word-final, in which case the first vowel with a rising tone is long instead if the second vowel is voiceless or lost. Vowel length is only distinctive with falling tone; with rising tone, it is entirely predictable.
 * and are found almost exclusively in loanwords.
 * appears as an allophone of unstressed, especially next to nasal consonants.
 * In posttonic position, there is a tendency to lower vowels, so that both and  merge with  (though some conservative speakers do not have this merger).  and  are also often lowered to  and, but remain distinct.
 * Etymologically short vowels become voiceless in final position. Among younger speakers they are often dropped altogether. is almost universally dropped,  (and  and, which have largely merged with ) less commonly, and  is retained by almost everyone in all positions.

Samples
A text collected by Milan Rešetar in 1911 (here superscripts indicate voiceless vowels):

A section of The Little Prince, as translated into Molise Slavic by Walter Breu and Nicola Gliosca:

An anonymous poem (reprinted in Hrvatske Novine: Tajednik Gradišćanskih Hrvatov, winner of a competition in Molise):


 * SIN MOJ

Mo prosič solite saki dan ma što činiš, ne govoreš maj je funia dan, je počela noča, maneštra se mrzli za te čeka. Letu vlase e tvoja mat gleda vane za te vit. Boli život za sta zgoro, ma samo mat te hoče dobro. Sin moj! Nimam već suze za još plaka nimam već riče za govorat. Srce se guli za te misli što ti prodava, oni ke sve te išće! Palako govoru, čelkadi saki dan, ke je dola droga na vi grad. Sin moj! Tvoje oč, bihu toko lipe, sada jesu mrtve, Boga ja molim, da ti živiš droga ja hočem da ti zabiš, doma te čekam, ke se vrniš, Solite ke mi prosiš, kupiš paradis, ma smrtu platiš.

Dictionaries

 * From: Josip Lisac: Dva moliškohrvatska rječnika, Mogućnosti 10/12, 2000.
 * Walter Breu-Giovanni Piccoli (con aiuto di Snježana Marčec), Dizionario croatomolisano di Acquaviva-Collecroce, 2000, Campobasso 2000
 * Ag. Piccoli-Antonio Samartino, Dizionario dell' idioma croato-molisano di Montemitro/Rječnik moliškohrvatskih govora Mundimitra, Matica Hrvatska Mundimitar - Zagreb, 2000.
 * Giovanni Piccoli: Lessico del dialetto di Acquaviva-Collecroce, Rome, 1967
 * Božidar Vidov: Rječnik ikavsko-štokavskih govora molizanskih Hrvata u srednjoj Italiji, Mundimitar, Štifilić, Kruč, Toronto, 1972.
 * Tatjana Crisman: Dall' altra parte del mare. Le colonie croate del Molise, Rome, 1980
 * Angelo Genova: Ko jesmo bolje: Ko bihmo, Vasto, 1990.