Isogloss
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Isoglosses on the Faroe Islands
An isogloss is the geographical boundary of a certain linguistic feature, e.g. the pronunciation of a vowel, the meaning of a word, or use of some syntactic feature. Major dialects are typically demarcated by whole bundles of isoglosses, e.g. the Benrath line that distinguishes High German from the other West Germanic languages; or the La Spezia-Rimini Line which divides the eastern Romance languages from the western ones. Undoubtedly, the largest well-known isogloss is the Centum-Satem isogloss, which traditionally separates the Indo-European languages into two distinct categories. A major isogloss in American English is the North-Midland isogloss, which demarcates numerous linguistic features, including the Northern Cities vowel shift: regions north of the line (including western New York; Cleveland, Ohio; lower Michigan; northern Illinois; and eastern Wisconsin) are subject to the shift and regions south of the line (including Pennsylvania, central and southern Ohio, and most of Indiana) are not. The name is inspired by contour lines or isopleths such as isobar, etc.; however, the isogloss separates rather than connects points of equal language (perhaps one could say it connects points of indefinite language). See alsoExternal links
als:Isoglosse br:Izoglos bg:Изоглоса ca:Isoglossa cv:Изоглосса cs:Izoglosa de:Isoglosse el:Ισόγλωσσο es:Isoglosa eu:Isoglosa fr:Isoglosse gl:Isoglosa id:Isoglos it:Isoglossa li:Isoglos hr:Izoglosa hu:Izoglossza nl:Isoglosse ja:等語線 ko:등어선 no:Isogloss pl:Izoglosa pt:Isoglossa ro:Izoglosă ru:Изоглосса sc:Isoglossa sv:Isogloss uk:Ізоглоса ReferencesChambers, J.K. and Peter Trudgill (1999) Dialectology (2nd Edition). Cambridge University Press. |


