Russian dialects


Russian dialects are spoken variants of the Russian language.
Depending on the presence or the absence of vowel reduction and the pronunciation of Proto-Slavic *g, Russian is divided into two main dialectical divisions and the intermediate one:
The dialects of the southern Ural, Siberia and the Far East may be of all three groups, depending on where the settlers from European Russia came from. The dialects of the Lower Don and the Northern Caucasus are of the Southern Russian origin.

Chronology and territory

All the Russian dialects are divided in two principal chronological and geographic groups:
  1. The dialects of the territory of the primary formation, which consist of "Old" Russia of the 16th century and roughly correlate with the modern Central and Northwestern Federal districts.
  2. The dialects of the territory of the second formation, where Russians settled after the 16th century.

    Classification

1. Northern Russian
2. Central or Middle Russian
3. Southern Russian

Isoglosses

;Notes

Other Dialects

Eastern Europe

Belarusian Russian
Moldovan Russian
Moldovan Russian is characterised by differences in orthography, with the use of Молдова instead of Молдавия in government and media of Moldova. This change is also widely accepted by Russian-language media inside of Russia, as well. Russian is more often used as a second language and as the language of interethnic communication than as a first language in the country, which contributes to influence from the state language - Romanian.
Ukrainian Russian
The Russian language as spoken in Odessa is influenced by Yiddish and Ukrainian in grammar, vocabulary, and phraseology. As a result, many phrases sound inherently and uniquely humorous to Russian speakers and constitute a staple of Odessa humour. Also, the Odessa dialect of Yiddish has plenty of Russianisms.

Central Russian

Bashkort Russian
Bashkort Russian is characterised by the adoption of native Bashkir and Tatar words such as айда replacing давай to mean "let's go".
Lake Peipus
Lake Peipus dialect is a Russian language variety spoken on both sides of the Lake Peipus in Pskov Oblast, Russia and some counties of Estonia. It originated as a mix of Pskov and Gdov dialects of the Central Russian cluster. As many other dialects from this area, it is often considered to be transitional between Russian and Belarusian. Lake Peipus dialects also include some loanwords from the Estonian language.
The dialect has been studied and described by Olga Rovnova of the University of Tartu who has conducted fieldwork in Russian Old Believers' communities in Estonia.

Caucasus

Abkhaz Russian
Abkhaz Russian is characterised by the use of Abkhaz terms, orthographical differences, and patterns of speech that diverge from that of Standard Russian.
Chechen Russian
Dagestani Russian
Dagestani Russian is a regional variety of the Russian language spoken in Dagestan, a constituent republic of the Russian Federation, and some of the neighboring regions including Astrakhan Oblast and Kalmykia. It is characterized by heavy influence from vernacular languages, mostly those belonging to the Northeast Caucasian and Turkic language families. It is considered a low prestige language and mostly used in informal domains. By some measures, it is considered an ethnolect.

Central Asia

Kazakhstani Russian
Most key word differences come in the form of toponyms of renamed cities after the 1991 independence of Kazakhstan. Not all renamings are manifested in the Russian language, such as with the city of Almaty, still known by its former name of Alma-Ata in Russian, because they sound similar. Other differences include names for authorities such as мажилис, мажилисмен which substitute the Russian word депутат. Акимат is a localised Russian construction of the borrowed word Аким, meaning mayor, and given the traditional -ат suffix in standard Russian that is used for words such as секретариат and ректорат. Kazakhstani Russian is often classified as being influenced strongly by Kazakh and the use of Kazakh words.
Kyrgyzstani Russian
Kyrgyzstani Russian is primarily characterised by orthographic differences. Киргизская Республика and Киргизия are the standard Russian names, but the country is called Кыргызская Республика or Кыргызстан in Russian by the local authorities. The difference between ы and и in naming is classified as a linguistics dispute and is not currently compulsory for Russian-language media to use.
There are also word differences, such as сотка replacing the standard мобильник.

Vocabulary

Russian dialects usually preserve many archaic words and forms which dropped out of use or were replaced with Church Slavonic counterparts. In North Russian there are about 200 words of Uralic origin.

Text corpora of Russian dialects