Northeastern Coastal Dialect

The Northeastern coastal dialect (Estonian: kirderannikumurre) is a dialect (or dialect group) of the Estonian language.

The coastal dialects of the Estonian language were spoken on the coastal strip of Estonia from Tallinn to river Narva. It has very few speakers left nowadays. According to some authors, the coastal dialects form one of the three dialect groups of the Estonian language (the other two being North Estonian dialect group and the South Estonian dialect group).

The specific features of the dialect group are mostly common with the Northern group of the Finnic languages. According to some authors, the 'Finnish-like' features (lack of syncope and apocope) of the coastal Estonian dialects are part of ancient heritage, rather than Finnish or Ingrian influence.

There are remnants of vowel harmony (räbälä, cf Standard Estonian räbala, 'rag' (partitive case)), there is no palatalization, short plosives are stronger than in other dialects of Estonian (mägi, cf. Finnish mäki). Similarly, more recent quantitative changes are absent (-, cf. Standard Estonian -, 'eye' - 'eyes'). Words expressing negation are finite: (en, et, ei, emma, etta, evad; cf. Standard Estonian 'ei' for all persons sg/pl), as in Finnish. In contrast to North Estonian dialects, where de plural and si preterite are usual, the coastal dialects have i plural (puhti käsiga, cf. Standard Estonian 'puhaste kätega', 'with clean hands') and i preterite.

Unlike all other Estonian dialects, the coastal dialects have inflected -nud participle as in Finnish: ('juobune piaga', cf. Standard Estonian 'joobnud peaga', literally 'with drunk head', ' surne sõnumi', Standard Estonian ' surnu sõnumi' ' the dead man's message').

The Northeastern coastal dialect of Estonian is nowadays alternatively split into two dialects: Coastal dialect and Alutaguse dialect, the former being more closely related with Southern Finnish dialects (note the non-presence of õ ), Izhor and Votic languages, whereas the latter has also been influenced by the central dialect of the Northern Estonian dialects (treating Northeastern coastal dialect as a single unit dates back to Arnold Kask's classification of Estonian dialects from the year 1956).

Famous quotes containing the word dialect:

    The eyes of men converse as much as their tongues, with the advantage that the ocular dialect needs no dictionary, but is understood all the world over.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)