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===Dialects===
===Dialects===
Albania has hundreds of dialects. However, the dialects can be divided into two main dialects, [[Gheg]] and [[Tosk_Albanian|Tosk]]. The [[Shkumbin]] river is roughly the dividing line, north of the Shkumbin is where Gheg is spoken and south of the Shkubin is where Tosk is spoken. The Gheg literary language has been documented since 1555, but sources say that it existed as a written language since at least 1332. Until the communists took power in Albania, the standard was based on Gheg. Although the literary versions of Tosk and Gheg are mutually intelligible, many of the regional dialects are not.
Albania has hundreds of dialects. However, the dialects can be divided into two main dialects, [[Gheg]] and [[Tosk_Albanian|Tosk]]. The [[Shkumbin]] river is roughly the dividing line, north of the Shkumbin is where Gheg is spoken and south of the Shkubin is where Tosk is spoken. The Gheg literary language has been documented since 1555. Until the communists took power in Albania, the standard was based on Gheg. Although the literary versions of Tosk and Gheg are mutually intelligible, many of the regional dialects are not.


[[Tosk]] is divided into many dialects. The main groups are Northern Tosk (Berat, Pojan, Vlorë) and Labërisht [[Labëria]]. In Greece, the [[Çam]] and the [[Arvanites]] speak different Tosk dialects with the dialect of the Arvanites only partially intelligible with other Tosk dialects. The Tosk dialects are spoken by most members of the large Albanian immigrant communities of [[Ukraine]], [[Turkey]], [[Egypt]], and the [[United States]]. Tosk dialects called [[Arbërisht]] are spoken by the [[Arbëreshë]], descendants of [[15th century|15th]] and [[16th century]] immigrants in southeastern [[Italy]], in small communities in the provinces of [[Sicily]], [[Calabria]], [[Basilicata]], [[Campania]], [[Molise]], [[Abruzzi]], and [[Puglia]].
[[Tosk]] is divided into many dialects. The main groups are Northern Tosk (Berat, Pojan, Vlorë) and Labërisht [[Labëria]]. In Greece, the [[Çam]] and the [[Arvanites]] speak different Tosk dialects with the dialect of the Arvanites only partially intelligible with other Tosk dialects. The Tosk dialects are spoken by most members of the large Albanian immigrant communities of [[Ukraine]], [[Turkey]], [[Egypt]], and the [[United States]]. Tosk dialects called [[Arbërisht]] are spoken by the [[Arbëreshë]], descendants of [[15th century|15th]] and [[16th century]] immigrants in southeastern [[Italy]], in small communities in the provinces of [[Sicily]], [[Calabria]], [[Basilicata]], [[Campania]], [[Molise]], [[Abruzzi]], and [[Puglia]].

Revision as of 10:34, 14 October 2006

Albanian
Shqip
Pronunciation/ʃcip/
Native toAlbania, Serbia (mainly Kosovo), Montenegro, Republic of Macedonia, Greece, Turkey, Italy, and other countries
RegionSoutheastern Europe
Native speakers
8,000,000 (Ethnologue, 2005)[1]
Indo-European
  • Albanian
Latin alphabet (Albanian variant)
Official status
Official language in
Albania, Kosovo, and parts of Serbia, Montenegro, and Republic of Macedonia
Language codes
ISO 639-1sq
ISO 639-2alb (B)
sqi (T)
ISO 639-3Variously:
sqi – Albanian (generic)
aln – Gheg
aae – Arbëreshë
aat – Arvanitika
als – Tosk

Albanian (gjuha shqipe IPA /ˈɟuˌha ˈʃciˌpɛ/) is a language spoken by about 8 million people, primarily in Albania, Serbia including Kosovo, Greece, Montenegro, and the Republic of Macedonia but also in other parts of the Balkans, along the eastern coast of Italy and in Sicily, as well as by a significant diaspora in Scandinavia, Germany, Greece, Italy, the UK, Egypt, Australia, Turkey, and the USA. The language forms its own distinct branch of the Indo-European language family.

Classification

Albanian was proven to be an Indo-European language in 1854 by the German philologist Franz Bopp. The Albanian language is its own independent branch of the Indo-European language family with no living close relatives (even though there are many dialects of Albanian, many distant and remote). There is no scholarly consensus over its origin. Some scholars maintain that it derives from the Illyrian language, and others claim that it derives from Daco-Thracian (Illyrian and Daco-Thracian however might have been closely related languages; see Thraco-Illyrian). This question is often loaded with political implications, but linguistically, the problem is very open; a recent linguist has even stated that Illyrian and Thracian may have been as close as Czech to Slovak (Paliga, 2002).

How Albanian compares with other languages

Albanian muaj i ri nënë motër natë hundë tre i zi / e zezë i kuq i verdhë i blertë / i gjelbër ujk
Other Indo-European languages
English month new mother sister night nose three black red yellow green wolf
Latin mēnsis novus māter soror nox nasus trēs āter, niger ruber flāvus, gilvus viridis lupus
Italian mese nuovo madre sorella notte naso tre nero rosso giallo verde lupo
Romanian luna nou/noi mamă soră noapte nas trei negru roşu galben verde lup
Welsh mis newydd mam chwaer nos trwyn tri du (/di/) coch, rhudd melyn gwyrdd, glas blaidd
Latvian mēnesis jauns māte māsa nakts deguns trīs melns sarkans dzeltens zaļš vilks
Bulgarian месец
mesets
нов
nov
майка
maika
сестра
sestra
нощ
nosht
нос
nos
три
tri
черен
cheren
червен
cherven
жълт
zhălt
зелен
zelen
вълк
vălk

Note: Aside from kuq, verdhë, and gjelbër, these Albanian words are directly inherited from Proto-Indo-European. Albanian motër is cognate with the Indo-European root for "mother", unique in having the meaning shift to "sister".

Note: The Albanian words for "yellow" and "green" are very similar to the Romanian and Italian for "green" and "yellow", and several of the other languages show similarities with one of the two words (for example, German gelb, but not grün). Does this show a similarity with Latin or with other languages of the Balkans? The inversion must have occurred when "green" and "yellow" were not considered distinct colours much as we consider both "turquoise" (cyan) and "indigo" (primary blue) to be "blue", with the result that the Albanian words for "green" and "yellow" appear switched relative to the other languages. However, some Gegh speakers of older generations may use "verdhë" to refer to "green", or even "blue". Note also Albanian and Welsh words for "red", the term being borrowed from Latin coccum "scarlet".

Geographic distribution

File:Albanian language map.jpg
Albanian distribution and dialects

Albanian is spoken by about 6 million people mainly in Albania, Kosovo and the Republic of Macedonia, and by immigrant communities in many countries such as Belgium, Egypt, Germany, Greece, Italy, Sweden, Turkey (Europe), Ukraine, UK and USA.

Official status

Albanian in a revised form of the Tosk dialect is the official language of the Republic of Albania. Albanian is also one of the official languages of Kosovo, Montenegro, and the Republic of Macedonia

Dialects

Albania has hundreds of dialects. However, the dialects can be divided into two main dialects, Gheg and Tosk. The Shkumbin river is roughly the dividing line, north of the Shkumbin is where Gheg is spoken and south of the Shkubin is where Tosk is spoken. The Gheg literary language has been documented since 1555. Until the communists took power in Albania, the standard was based on Gheg. Although the literary versions of Tosk and Gheg are mutually intelligible, many of the regional dialects are not.

Tosk is divided into many dialects. The main groups are Northern Tosk (Berat, Pojan, Vlorë) and Labërisht Labëria. In Greece, the Çam and the Arvanites speak different Tosk dialects with the dialect of the Arvanites only partially intelligible with other Tosk dialects. The Tosk dialects are spoken by most members of the large Albanian immigrant communities of Ukraine, Turkey, Egypt, and the United States. Tosk dialects called Arbërisht are spoken by the Arbëreshë, descendants of 15th and 16th century immigrants in southeastern Italy, in small communities in the provinces of Sicily, Calabria, Basilicata, Campania, Molise, Abruzzi, and Puglia.

Gheg (or Geg) is spoken in Northern Albania, Macedonia, Kosovo, and in parts of Montenegro. Each area of northern Albania has its own dialect and can be divided into dialect groups: Tirana, Durrës, Elbasan and Kavaja; Kruja and Laci; Mati, Dibra and Mirdita; Lezha, Shkodra, Kraja, Ulqinj; etc. Malësia e Madhe, Rugova, and villages scattered alongside the Adriatic Coast form the northmost dialect of Albania today although, Albanian was formerly spoken in Dalmatia until recently. There are many other dialects in the region of Kosovo and in parts of southern Montenegro, and in Macedonia. The dialects of Malsia e Madhe and Dukagjini near Shkodra are being lost because the younger generations prefer to speak the dialect of Shkodra.

Gheg and Tosk differ mainly by:

  1. rhotacism - Gheg has n where Tosk has r
  2. late Proto-Albanian â + tautosyllabic nasal > Geg low-central or low-back vowel; > Tosk mid-central, or low-front-to-central vowel
  3. Proto-Albanian ô > uo > Gheg vo, Tosk va
  4. infinitival use of verbal adjective preceded in Gheg by me and in Tosk by për
  5. difference in lexemes, noun plurals, suppletion of the aorist system of the verb

Subdialects may vary based on:

  1. retention or loss of final schwa (-ë)
  2. devoicing of final voiced segments
  3. treatment of intervocalic and final nj
  4. treatment of clusters of nasal + voiced stop
  5. development of anaptyctic homorganic stops after nasals that follow a stressed vowel and precede unstressed -ël or -ër
  6. treatment of vowel clusters ie, ye, and ua
  7. treatment of stressed /e/ before a nasal

Notable lexicological differences between Tosk and Gheg

Standard form Tosk form Gheg form Translation
Shqipëri Shqipëri Shqypni Albania
një një nji / njo one
nëntë nëntë nândë nine
është është âsht / â is
bëj bëj bâj do
emër emër êmën name
pjekuri pjekuri pjekuni maturity
gjendje gjëndje gjêndje situation
zog zok zog bird
mbret mbret mret king
për të punuar për të punuar me punue to work
rërë rërë rânë sand
qenë qënë kjênë / kânë been (part.)
dëllinjë enjë bërshê juniper
baltë llum bâltë mud
cimbidh mashë danë tongs

( ˆ ) denotes nasal vowels, which are a common feature of Gheg.

Sounds

Albanian has 7 vowels and 29 consonants. Gheg has a set of nasal vowels which are absent in Tosk. Another peculiarity is the mid-central vowel "ë" reduced at the end of the word. The stress is fixed mainly on the penultimate syllable.

Consonants

  bilabial labio-
dental
dental alveolar post-
alveolar
palatal velar glottal
plosive p  b     t  d   c  ɟ k  g  
nasal m     n   ɲ    
trill       r        
flap       ɾ        
fricative   f  v θ  ð s  z ʃ  ʒ     h
affricate       ts  dz tʃ  dʒ      
approximant           j    
lateral approximant       l  ɫ        
IPA Description Written as Pronounced as in
p Voiceless bilabial plosive p Template:Bold dark reden
b Voiced bilabial plosive b Template:Bold dark redat
t Voiceless alveolar plosive t Template:Bold dark redan
d Voiced alveolar plosive d Template:Bold dark redebt
c Voiceless palatal plosive q similar to geTemplate:Bold dark red Template:Bold dark redou
ɟ Voiced palatal plosive gj similar to haTemplate:Bold dark red Template:Bold dark redou
k Voiceless velar plosive k Template:Bold dark redar
g Voiced velar plosive g Template:Bold dark redo
ts Voiceless alveolar affricate c haTemplate:Bold dark red
dz Voiced alveolar affricate x gooTemplate:Bold dark red
Voiceless postalveolar affricate ç Template:Bold dark redop
Voiced postalveolar affricate xh Template:Bold dark redet
θ Voiceless dental fricative th Template:Bold dark redin
ð Voiced dental fricative dh Template:Bold dark redis
f Voiceless labiodental fricative f Template:Bold dark redar
v Voiced labiodental fricative v Template:Bold dark redan
s Voiceless alveolar fricative s Template:Bold dark redon
z Voiced alveolar fricative z Template:Bold dark redip
ʃ Voiceless postalveolar fricative sh Template:Bold dark redow
ʒ Voiced postalveolar fricative zh viTemplate:Bold dark redion
h Voiceless glottal fricative h Template:Bold dark redat
m Bilabial nasal m Template:Bold dark redan
n Alveolar nasal n Template:Bold dark redot
ɲ Palatal nasal nj Spanish seTemplate:Bold dark redor
l Alveolar lateral approximant l Template:Bold dark redean
j Palatal approximant j Template:Bold dark redes
ɫ Velarized alveolar lateral approximant ll baTemplate:Bold dark red
r Alveolar trill rr Spanish hieTemplate:Bold dark redo
ɾ Alveolar tap r Spanish aTemplate:Bold dark redo

Notes:

  • The affricates are pronounced as one sound (a stop and a fricative at the same point).
  • The palatal stops q and gj are completely unknown to English, so the pronunciation guide is approximate. Palatal stops can be found in other languages, for example, in Hungarian (where these sounds are spelt ty and gy respectively).
  • The palatal nasal nj corresponds to the sound of the Spanish ñ or the French or Italian digraph gn (as in gnocchi). It is pronounced as one sound, not a nasal plus a glide.
  • The ll sound is a velarised lateral, close to English "dark L".
  • The contrast between flapped r and trilled rr is the same as in Spanish. English does not have any of the two sounds phonemically (but tt in butter is pronounced as a flap r in most American dialects).
  • (1) The letter ç can be spelt ch on American English keyboards, both due to its English sound, but more importantly, due to analogy with Albanian xh, sh, zh. (Usually, however, it's spelt simply c, which may cause confusion; however, meanings are usually understood).

Vowels

IPA Description Written as Pronounced as in
i Close front unrounded vowel i bTemplate:Bold dark redd
ɛ Open-mid front unrounded vowel e bTemplate:Bold dark redd
a Open front unrounded vowel a Spanish cTemplate:Bold dark redsa
ə Schwa ë Template:Bold dark redlone
ɔ Open-mid back rounded vowel o fTemplate:Bold dark redr
y Close front rounded vowel y French tTemplate:Bold dark red, German Template:Bold dark redber
u Close back rounded vowel u dTemplate:Bold dark redm

Grammar

Albanian nouns are inflected by gender (masculine, feminine and neuter) and number (singular and plural). There are 4 declensions with 6 cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative and vocative), although the vocative only occurs with a limited number of words. The cases apply to both definite and indefinite nouns and there are numerous cases of syncretism. The equivalent of a genitive is formed by using the prepositions i/e/të/së with the dative.

The following shows the declension of the masculine noun mal (mountain):

Indefinite Singular Indefinite Plural Definite Singular Definite Plural
Nominative mal (mountain) male (mountains) mali (the mountain) malet (the mountains)
Accusative mal male malin malet
Genitive i/e/të/së mali i/e/të/së maleve i/e/të/së malit i/e/të/së maleve
Dative mali maleve malit maleve
Ablative mali maleve/malesh malit maleve

The following table shows the declension of the feminine noun vajzë (girl)

Indefinite Singular Indefinite Plural Definite Singular Definite Plural
Nominative vajzë (girl) vajza (girls) vajza (the girl) vajzat (the girls)
Accusative vajzë vajza vajzën vajzat
Genitive i/e/të/së vajze i/e/të/së vajzave i/e/të/së vajzës i/e/të/së vajzave
Dative vajze vajzave vajzës vajzave
Ablative vajze vajzave/vajzash vajzës vajzave

The article can be posited either before or after the noun as in many other Balkan languages, for example Romanian and Bulgarian.

  • The definite article can be in the form of noun suffixes, which vary with gender and case.
    • For example in singular nominative, masculine nouns add -i or -u:
      • mal (mountain) / mali (the mountain);
      • libër (book) / libri (the book);
      • zog (bird) / zogu (the bird).
    • Feminine nouns take the suffix -(j)a:
      • veturë (car) / vetura (the car);
      • shtëpi (house) / shtëpia (the house);
      • lule (flower) / lulja (the flower).
  • Neuter nouns take -t.

Albanian has developed an analytical verbal structure in place of the earlier synthetic system, inherited from Proto-Indo-European. Its complex system of moods (6 types) and tenses (3 simple and 5 complex constructions) is distinctive among Balkan languages. There are two general types of conjugation. In Albanian the Constituent Order is Subject Verb Object and negation is expressed by the particles nuk or s' in front of the verb, for example:

  • Toni nuk flet anglisht "Tony doesn't speak English";
  • s'e di "I don't know".

In imperative sentences, the particle mos is used:

  • mos harro "do not forget!".

Vocabulary

There are Albanian words which have cognates (of non-Latin origin) in Romanian and there is a theory that the Dacian language, spoken by the Dacians before the Romanization was a language related to proto-Albanian.

The Illyrian Vocabulary is very small and is mainly of peoples names and places. A great deal of this name have a meaning in modern Albanian:
ylis - ylli - Star
Bardylis - White Star
Thetis (godess of the sea)- Deti - Sea
Emathia - e madhia - big, Great
Malion - Mali - Mountain
Dhea ( Gea equivalent) - Dheu - Ground, Earth, (Mother Earth)
Di,Diti - Dita - Day

The earliest accepted documentation in the Albanian language is from the 15th century AD, even though recently claims have been made for documents dating late 12th to have been found, one in the Vatican Library and another one in the Athos Monastry in Greece. Church documents in Latin have passages mentioning "la Lingua Albanesca" in the 12th century as well. This is a time when Albanian Principalities start to be mentioned and expand inside and outside the Byzantine Empire. It is assumed that Greek and Balkan Latin (which was the ancestor of Romanian and other Balkan Romance languages), would exert a great influence on Albanian. Examples of words borrowed from Latin: qytet < civitas (city), qiell < caelum (sky), mik < amicus (friend). But note Illyrian God of friendship was called "Mikon". The Illyrian Goddes of hunting "Zana", "Thana", or "Dhiana" to be seen in the Roman deities as "Diana" is always pictured with a goat. Note "Dhiana" meaning "Lady of the Goats" in Albanian.

After the Slavs arrived in the Balkans, another source of Albanian vocabulary were the Slavic languages, especially Bulgarian. The rise of the Ottoman Empire meant an influx of Turkish words; this also entailed the borrowing of Persian and Arabic words through Turkish. Suprisingly the Persian words seem to be absorbed the most. Some loanwords from Modern Greek also exist especially in the south of Albania. A lot of the loaned words have been resubstituted from Albanian rooted words or modern Latinized (international) words. The random use of loaned words decreases everyday and is considered as "Villagers Talk" and is made fun of.

Even though a lot of foreign influences have come and gone the proper Albanian Language has managed to survive and earn its own category in the Indo-European tree of languages. The language structure makes it an old language and whether it is the descendand of an Illyrian Dialect or not has divided the linguists today.

Writing system

Full article: Albanian alphabet

Albanian has been written with many different alphabets since the 15th century. Originally, the Tosk dialect was written with the Greek alphabet and the Gheg dialect was written with the Latin alphabet. They have both also been written with the Ottoman Turkish version of the Arabic alphabet, the Cyrillic alphabet, and some local alphabets.

The modern Albanian alphabet was standardised in 1909, and is based on the Latin alphabet, with the addition of the letters ë, ç, and nine digraphs.

History

The Albanian language has been variously attached to Illyrian and Messapian, both of which were probably related. Only the latter, to a small extent, has left any evidence that may in any way liken it to Albanian. Consider the Messapic words bilia (Alb bijë "daughter"), brendon "deer" (Alb bri, brî "horn", pl. brirë, brinë), hazavathi 'he pours out' (Alb deh "to make drunk"), klaohi 'listen!' (Alb quaj, quej "to call, give a name"), kos (Alb kush "who"), veinan (Alb vehte "self"), venas (Alb uri, û "hunger"), etc. Messapian settlements are known to have existed along the Adriatic in both Italy and Illyria, especially around Durrës. Indeed, Messapian has left several words in Italian or in neighboring Italo-Roman languages, including manzo "ox" (cf. Alb mëz, mâz "poney"), northern bagola, bagula (cf. Alb bajgë "dung"), dialectal musso "ass" (cf. Alb mushk "mule").

Even the name Albanian is of some dispute. Appearing in the 9th c. in Greek as the Arvanoi, and thereafter under similar names, including obsolete Albanian arbër or arbën, it had been presumed to stem from Vulgar Latin Albanus, from the southern Illyrian tribal name Albanoí. However, others like Orel attach it instead to a slight corruption of Labëri "Laberia", from South Slavic labanĭja, from olbanĭja. The name Tosk, Alb toskë, was borrowed from Venetian tosko "rough, crude", literally "Tuscan".

The trouble of a homeland for the Albanians becomes all the more problematic. Despite Albanian nationalist claims to the contrary, the Albanians almost certainly came from farther north and inland than would suggest the present borders of Albania. First, Albanian has few early Greek borrowings, and the very word for Greek, gërk, was borrowed from South Slavic; cf. Bulg. grŭk, Serb-Croat gr"k. Similarly, the Illyrian coast is not a likely source since Albanian has no inherited nautical or indigenous sea-faring terminology, and has instead supplemented this absence with subsequent borrowing from Latin or Greek or recent metaphorical lexical creations. Third, toponyms along the coast, in contrast with native penultimate accent (ex: mbësë "niece" < PA nepô'tia), often show substratal antepenultimate accent (ex: Durrës < Dúrrhachium; Pojanë < Apóllonia), though there are some exceptions (Vlorë < Aulónâ vs. Greek Aúlon). Also, Albanian is believed to be the source for a number of grammatical and lexical similarities shared by otherwise dissimilar languages including Romanian, Bulgarian, Serbo-Croatian, and to some extent Greek. Also, there is a lack of Proto-Albanian place names in Illyria. Likewise, the word shqa, from Lat Sclavus "Slav" refers only to Bulgarians.

Instead, given the overwhelming amount of shepherding and mountaineering vocabulary as well as the extensive influence of Latin, it is more likely the Albanians come from north of the Jireček line, on the Latin-speaking side, perhaps from the late Roman province of Dardania from the western Balkans. The Northern Albanian Alps are referred to as Bjeshkët e Namena, and this region's name is believed by some to come from Proto-Albanian beškai tâi, giving Alb bjeshkë "mountain", borrowed ultimately from Vulgar Latin pastica "pasture".

Yet, one area in the late Roman province of Praevitana (modern northern Albania) seems to show an area where a primarily shepherding, transhumance population of Illyrians retained their culture. This area was based in the Mat district and the region of high mountains in Northern Albania, as well as in Dukagjin, Mirditë, and the mountains of Drin, from where the population would descend in the summer to the lowlands of western Albania, the Black Drin (Drin i zi) river valley, and into parts of Old Serbia. Indeed, the region's complete lack of Latin place names seems to imply little latinization of any kind and a more likely spot for the origin of Albanian.

The period in which Proto-Albanian and Latin interacted was protracted and drawn out over six centuries, 1st c. AD to 6th or 7th c. AD. This is born out into roughly three layers of borrowings, the largest number belonging to the second or middle layer. The first, with the fewest borrowings, was a time of less important interaction. The final period, probably preceding the Slavic or Germanic invasions, also has a notably smaller amount of borrowings. Each layer is characterized by a different treatment of most vowels, the first layer having several that follow the evolution of Early Proto-Albanian into Albanian; later layers reflect vowel changes indemic to Late Latin and presumably Proto-Romance. Other formative changes include the syncretism of several noun case endings, especially in the plural, as well as the largescale palatalization.

After this period followed a period, 7th c. AD to 9th c. AD, in which Slavic borrowings were most common, some of which predate the o-a shift in Southern Slavic, though evidently not as much as Rumanian had made. Following this period was a stage of protracted contact with the Proto-Rumanians, though the borrowing seems to have been mostly one sided - from Albanian into Rumanian. This indicates the Rumanians interacted longer with the Slavs and then moved into an area with a majority of Albanian speakers, since presumably this would explain the one-way borrowing. This places the Albanians in the Western or Central Balkans, probably in the center and the Rumanians further to the East, close perhaps to the Bulgarians. Indeed, the best match for the Slavic cognates borrowed into Rumanian is Middle Bulgarian.

Combined with archaeology and history, it seems likely that the core of Albanian territory lay in a quadrilateral with vertices at Bar, Prizren, Ohrid, and Vlorë during the Middle Ages. Indeed, the center of the Albanians remained the river Mat, and in 1079 AD they are recorded in the territory between Ohrid and Thessalonika as well as in Epirus; Albanian place names from a large portion of Macedonia and parts of Serbia indicate former Albanian territories.

Furthermore, the major Tosk-Gheg dialect division is based on the course of the Shkumbin River, a seasonal stream that lay near the old Via Egnatia. Since rhotacism postdates the dialect division, it is reasonable that the major dialect division occurred after the christianization of the Roman Empire (4th c. AD) and before the eclipse of the East-West land-based trade route by Venetian seapower (10th c. AD).

The oldest surviving document written in Albanian is "Formula e Pagëzimit" (Baptismal formula), written in 1462 in the Gheg dialect, and some New Testament verses from that period.

The oldest known Albanian printed book, Meshari [1] or missal, was written by Gjon Buzuku, a Catholic cleric, in 1555. The first Albanian school is believed to have been opened by Franciscans in 1638 in Pdhanë. In 1635, Frang Bardhi wrote the first Latin-Albanian dictionary.

References

  • Encyclopædia Britannica, edition 15 (1985). Article: Albanian language
  • Huld, Martin E. Basic Albanian Etymologies. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers, 1984.
  • Martin Camaj, Albanian Grammar, Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden
  • Orel, Vladimir. A Concise Historical Grammar of the Albanian Language: Reconstruction of Proto-Albanian. Leiden: Brill, 2000.
  1. ^ Gheg 2,779,246 + Tosk 2,980,000 + Arbereshe 80,000 + Arvanitika 150,000 = 5,989,246 (Ethnologue, 2005)

See also

Samples of various Albanian dialects:

Dictionaries:

Keyboard layouts:

  • Prektora 1 ISO-8859-1 standardized layout for Windows XP (Albanian language)