Marchigiano dialect


Marchigiano refers to a tight cluster of local Romance speech types spoken in the central part of the region Marche, in Italy, in a zone which includes the provinces of Ancona, Macerata and Fermo. It is one of the Central Italian dialect types, and forms part of the typological continuum with Umbrian dialects and Tuscan. There are notable grammatical, lexical and idiomatic differences between Marchigiano and standard Italian language, but it is generally considered, along with the rest of Central Italian dialects, rather intelligible for a speaker of Standard Italian.
In itself Marchigiano is not uniform from town to town, being divided in two main areas:
The three areas of the Marchigiano dialect are united by some common features which distinguish the dialect from the other central Italian languages :
The conjugation of to be and to have got at the present indicative tense in the two main dialects is as follows :

Features of the three areas

Ancona's dialect

The dialect of Ancona is spoken purely in Ancona town and influenced nearby cities only recently. It has several gallo-italic traits, so it is considered the northernmost central italian dialect. Particularly this dialect's speakers always use the article el unlike standard Italian which in some cases uses lo. Only the speakers of the towns which are closer to Macerata use the article lo as in Italian. These cities also undergo other influences from Macerata's dialect because they are closer to it.

Fabriano's dialect

The dialect of Fabriano is spoken in the town of Fabriano and in the towns closer to it. Rhotacism occurs in this dialect > carza, fulmine.

Macerata's dialect

The dialect of Macerata is spoken in the province of Macerata and in the Fermo's one. The speakers of Macerata,to say the, use lu and lo .
Rhotacism occurs. A lot of assimilations occur:
There follows a list of nouns, verbs and other words from Marchigiano