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Language is one
of the most important features of a people. As for the
Macedonian people and its state are concerned, language is of
extreme significance and offers confirmation of their historical
continuity. Apart from being the official language in the
Republic of Macedonia, Macedonian is spoken and cherished in
many European countries, the United States, Canada and
Australia, wherever Macedonians live. It is also the mother
tongue and a language of everyday communication in those parts
of the Balkan states populated by ethnic Macedonians.
As the official
language of the Republic of Macedonia, Macedonian is written
using its Cyrillic alphabet. The Macedonian literary standard is
a modern European language, which according to its
characteristics is different from the neighboring and other
Slavic and non-Slavic languages.
Macedonian is an
Indo-European language from the family of Slavic languages
belonging to the South-Slavic group. At the same time, it is a
Balkan language. It is interesting to mention that there are
instances in the world when two or more nations have a common
language, and vice versa, when some nations have two languages.
The Macedonian nation, however, is in this respect like the
majority of nations in the world - its members have a separate
language. This fact creates a feeling of independence in every
member of the Macedonian nation and represents a significant
contribution in the construction of Macedonian national
consciousness.
The historical
development of the Macedonian language dates back to the 9th
century AD when Slavonic literacy began with a standard
Macedonian language. The modern codification of the Macedonian
literary language was as late as 1944, although from the 1860s
onwards, attempts were made at creating a general Macedonian
literary standard.
The Macedonian
language has a rich history and has played a key role in the
development of the spiritual culture, creative activity and the
preservation of the distinctive national identity of the
Macedonians. It developed from the dialect of the South Slavs
who deeply penetrated the Balkan Peninsula. It has common
features with the Bulgarian dialects to the east and Serbian
dialects to the north. Located in the Slavic linguistic
periphery within the sphere of Greek-Byzantine civilization and
Roman-Balkan culture, Macedonian preserves numerous archaic
features, such as the use of imperfect and aorist, and has made
a number of innovations.
Today it occupies
a central position on the Balkan Peninsula. It has common
borders with Albanian, Greek and the Turkish spoken in Thrace,
which makes possible the inclusion of a large number of Balkan
characteristics into the Macedonian language. Some of the more
characteristic Balkan features of Macedonian are the
postpositive article, analytic declination (the loss of case
forms), double object, da-constructions, kje-constructions,
constructions with ima/nema, constructions with sum +
deverbative, etc.
The grammatical
structure of Macedonian was chiefly stabilized during the 15th
century. The modern Macedonian literary standard is based on the
central variants of the western dialect, west of the River
Vardar, even though it contains features from the eastern
dialect, to the east of the Vardar. A characteristic feature of
the Macedonian literary standard is the three-syllable accent
(the accent always falls on the third syllable from the end in
words of three syllables or more), and the clear pronunciation
of unaccented vowels.
As we have
already mentioned, starting from the 9th century and the
foundation of the well-known Ohrid Literary School, the standard
Macedonian language was used in written documents for a long
period: until the 11th century in the Glagolitic, and after that
in the Cyrillic script. Of old written documents (until the 13th
century), we should mention Dobromir's Gospel, the Ohrid Apostle
(Work of the Apostles), the Slepche Apostle, Dobrejsho's Gospel,
the Macedonian Gospel of Priest John, the Dechani Gospel, the
Vraneshnica Apostle, Pogodin's Psalter, the Bologna Psalter,
Radomir's Gospel and the Strumica Apostle.
The phonetic
principle has been applied in contemporary orthography, which
means that there is a separate letter for each sound, so that
the Macedonian alphabet has 31 letters. The period since 1944
has led to a swift development and comprehensive affirmation of
the Macedonian literary language within the country and abroad.
The first grammar was published by Krume Kepeski in 1946. A
detailed grammar in two volumes was published by Blazhe Koneski
in 1952 (Volume 1) and 1954 (Volume 2), while the first
Macedonian grammar by a foreign scholar was published by H. Lunt
in 1952. An abundant literature has been written in Macedonian
in all fields, while in the fields of linguistics, a
comprehensive Dictionary of the Macedonian Language and many
bilingual dictionaries have been prepared. A large number of
works, from classical literature up to the contemporary
literature of many people, have been translated into Macedonian.
There are a
number of institutions in the Republic of Macedonia where the
Macedonian Language has been studied. Macedonian is taught as a
subject in several university centres in the world, at the
appropriate faculties in Moscow, Voronyezh, Minsk, Ivanovo,
Warsaw, Krakow, Katowice, Lodz, Krajova, Prague, Vienna, Halle,
Lund, Paris, Naples, Amsterdam, Utrecht, Bradford, Portland,
Budapest, Istanbul and Toronto. Munich, Regensburg, Zurich,
Cologne, Cannes, Brno, Bucharest, Harvard, Chicago, New York,
Nanking, Klagenfurt, Trieste, Bratislava, St. Petersburg,
Kansas, Syracuse, Ohio and Canberra. Macedonian is being taught
in all universities of the former Yugoslavia.
Findings from the
study of the Macedonian language have been published in
specialized editions. A large number of scholarly papers from
the field of Macedonian studies have been published by
Macedonian and foreign authors.
There are
thirty-one sounds in the Macedonian language. In the Macedonian
Cyrillic alphabet, there is one symbol for each sound, that is,
there are as many letters as sounds (31), making it completely
phonetic. Spelling in Macedonian does not present any
difficulties since there is one symbol for each sound. Thus,
Macedonian is surely one of the easiest languages to learn to
read and write.
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