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Mòcheno language

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Upper German variety of Italy
Mòcheno
Bersntolerisch,Bersntoler sproch
Native toItaly
RegionBersntol
Native speakers
1,397 (2021)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3mhn
Glottologmoch1255
ELPMócheno
 Mòcheno communities in Trentino

Mòcheno (Italian pronunciation:[ˈmɔːkeno];German:Fersentalerisch;Bavarian:Bersntolerisch) is anUpper German variety spoken in three towns of theBersntol (German:Fersental;Italian:Valle del Fersina), inTrentino, northeasternItaly.

Mòcheno is closely related toBavarian and is variously classified either as a Southern Bavarianvariety or a separate language of its own. It has also been posited that it may be descended fromLombardic (with influence from nearby dialects). Mòcheno speakers reportedly partially understand Bavarian,Cimbrian, orStandard German. However, many essential differences in grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation render it difficult for speakers of Standard German to understand.

Name

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The nameMòcheni used by bilingualItalian- andLadin-speaking neighbours to refer to the speakers of the language has been coined from the verbmòchen "to make", often used to build compound predicates in the language.[2]

Geographic distribution

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According to the census of 2001, the first in which data on native languages were recorded, Mòcheno was spoken by a majority in the following municipalities (numbers of members of the Mòcheno linguistic group):Fierozzo/Florutz/Vlarotz (423 people, 95.92%),Palù/Palai/Palae (184 people, 95.34%),Frassilongo/Gereut/Garait (340 people, 95.24%, including the village of Roveda/Eichleit/Oachlait). In othermunicipalities of Trentino 1,329 persons declared themselves members of the Mòcheno linguistic group, a total of 2,276 in Trentino.[3] In the 2011 census, the total number of speakers in the province decreased to 1,660.[4]

Status

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Mòcheno is officially recognised in Trentino by provincial and national law. Starting in the 1990s, various laws and regulations have been passed by the Italian parliament and provincial assembly that put the Mòcheno language and culture under protection. A cultural institute was founded by decree, whose purpose is to safeguard and raise awareness of the language. School curricula were adapted in order to teach in Mòcheno, and Italian street signs are being changed to bilingual Mòcheno/Italian.

Sample text

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MòchenoGermanEnglish

Vatar ingar
en Himbl,
gahailegt kimmp der dai Núm.
der dai Raich schellt kemmen.[5]

Vater unser
im Himmel,
geheiligt werde Dein Name.
Dein Reich komme.

Our Father
in heaven,
hallowed be Thy name.
Thy kingdom come.

References

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  1. ^"I MOCHENI SONO 713, LO DICONO I RISULTATI DELLA RILEVAZIONE SULLA CONSISTENZA DELLE POPOLAZIONI DI MINORANZA" (in Italian). Retrieved2025-08-28.
  2. ^Ignaz Grandi, a letter to the editor ofTageszeitung Dolomiten from Sept. 29th, 1981
  3. ^"Tav. I.5 - Appartenenza alla popolazione di lingua ladina, mochena e cimbra, per comune di area di residenza (Censimento 2001)"(PDF).Annuario Statistico 2006 (in Italian). Autonomous Province of Trento. 2007. Retrieved2011-05-12.
  4. ^"Census Statistica"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2021-01-07. Retrieved2012-10-24.
  5. ^"Das Vaterunser auf Mòchenisch (Fersentalerisch)" (in Mòcheno). Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. 2006. Retrieved2011-05-13.

Further reading

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Grammar
  • Anthony Rowley:Liacht as de sproch. Grammatica della lingua mòchena / Grammatik des Deutsch-Fersentalerischen. Istituto Culturale Mòcheno-Cimbro / Kulturinstitut für das Fersental und Lusern / Kulturinstitut Bersntol-Lusérn, Palù del Fèrsina (Trento) 2003,ISBN 88-900656-1-3 (Digitalisat:PDF)
Dictionary
  • Anthony Rowley:Fersentaler Wörterbuch. Wörterverzeichnis der deutschen Sprachinselmundart des Fersentals in der Provinz Trient/Oberitalien. Buske, Hamburg 1989 (= Bayreuther Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft, Dialektologie, 2),ISBN 3-87118-593-0
Secondary literature
  • Cognola, Federica:Costruzioni infinitivali e fenomeni di trasparenza nel dialetto della Valle del Fèrsina In: Quaderni patavini di linguistica 22 (2006), pg. 3-48
  • Křížek, Ondřej:German-speaking groups in Italy. Kulturní studia / Cultural Studies 2/2017, p. 27-55,doi:10.7160/ks.2017.090202
  • Mirtes, Hans:Das Ferstental und die Fersentaler. Zur Geographie, Geschichte und Volkskunde einer deutschen Sprachinsel im Trentino/Norditalien. Institute für Geographie, Regensburg 1996 (= Regensburger geographische Schriften, Heft 26)
  • Pellegrini, Giovanni Battista (ed.):La Valle del Fèrsina e le isole linguistiche di origine tedesca nel Trentino: Atti del convegno interdisciplinare, Sant'Orsola (Trento), 1 - 3 settembre 1978. Museo degli usi e costumi della gente trentina, S. Michele all'Adige 1979
  • Rowley, Anthony:"Mocheno e Cimbro". Von Dialekt(en) zu Sprache(n)? In: Dieter Stellmacher (ed.),Dialektologie zwischen Tradition und Neuansätzen: Beiträge der Internationalen Dialektologentagung, Göttingen, 19. - 21. Oktober 1998, Steiner, Stuttgart 2000 (= Zeitschrift für Dialektologie und Linguistik, Beiheft 109), pg. 213-221,ISBN 3-515-07762-6
  • Rowley, Anthony:Die Mundarten des Fersentals. In: Maria Hornung (ed.),Die deutschen Sprachinseln in den Südalpen. Mundarten und Volkstum, Olms, Hildesheim / Zürich / New York, 1994 (= Studien zur Dialektologie, 3; Germanistische Linguistik, 124/125), pg. 145-160,ISBN 3-487-09957-8
  • Rowley, Anthony:Die Sprachinseln der Fersentaler und Zimbern. In: Robert Hinderling / Ludwig M. Eichinger (ed.):Handbuch der mitteleuropäischen Sprachminderheiten, Narr, Tübingen 1996, pg. 263-285,ISBN 3-8233-5255-5
  • Rowley, Anthony:Fersental (Val Fèrsina bei Trient/Oberitalien) - Untersuchung einer Sprachinselmundart. Niemeryer, Tübingen 1986 (= Phonai. Lautbibliothek der deutschen Sprachen und Mundarten, Deutsche Reihe, Bd. 28; Monographien, Bd. 18),ISBN 3-484-23131-9
  • Wurzer, Bernhard:Die deutschen Sprachinseln in Oberitalien. 5. erw. Aufl., Athesia, Bozen 1983,ISBN 88-7014-269-8

External links

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Media related toMòcheno language at Wikimedia Commons

Italo-Romance
Italian
Venetian[a]
Tuscan
Central Italian
Intermediate Southern (Neapolitan)
Extreme Southern
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  1. ^Venetian is either grouped with the rest of the Italo-Dalmatian or the Gallo-Italic languages, depending on the linguist, but the major consensus among linguists is that in the dialectal landscape of northern Italy, Veneto dialects are clearly distinguished from Gallo-Italic dialects.
According to contemporaryphilology
Anglo-Frisian
Anglic
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East Frisian
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Low German
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