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between which there extends a wide belt of ‘transitional’ dialects,
                            southern  dialects  on  northern  foundations  (that  is,  historically
                            northern dialects that were assimilated by southern dialects). The
                            northern  boundary  of  this  transitional  belt  runs  along  the  line
                            Włodawa–Kamin-Koshyrskyi–the town of Stepan–Kyiv–Nizhyn–
                            Hlukhiv;  the  southern,  along  the  line  Hrubeshiv–Zhytomyr–
                            Pereiaslav-Khmelnytskyi–Lubny–Romny–Sumy. The fundamental
                            difference between the northern and southern dialectal groups lies
                            in the role of accentuation in the transmutation of the old vowels ě,
                            o, and e to the i sound (did from dědъ [old man]; dim from domъ
                            [house];  lid  from  ledъ  [ice]).  In  the  south  this  change  occurred
                            independently of the accent (lis – lisý [forest]; dim – dimký); in the
                            north it took place only under the accent (lies – lesý; müst, muost –
                            mostkí  [bridge]).  The  same  applies  to  the  vowel  ’a  from  the
                            Common Slavic ę (in the northern group, when accented—’a, ja:
                            z’at’  [son-in-law];  when  unaccented—e:  zetí  [pl]).  The  northern
                            dialectal group is subdivided into the following dialects: the east
                            Polisian (east of the Dnieper River), the central Polisian (between
                            the Dnieper and the Horyn River), the west Polisian (between the
                            Horyn  and  the  Buh  River  and  Lisna  River),  and  the  Podlachian
                            dialects.  The  main  differences  among  them  are  the  varying
                            developments of diphthongs in place of ě, o, e; the appearance of
                            akan'e in east Polisian and dzekan'e and partially ukan'e in central
                            Polisian; and/or morphological similarities with the southwestern
                            dialects (in west Polisian).
                                  The  southern  group  of  dialects  is  divided  into  two
                            subgroups:  the  more  uniform  southeastern  dialects  (central
                            Dnieper dialects, Slobidska Ukraine dialects, and steppe dialects)
                            and the southwestern dialects, which are highly differentiated (the
                            approximate  boundary  between  the  two  is  the  line  Khvastiv–
                            Uman–Balta).  The  southwestern  group  is  composed  of  the
                            following  dialects:  South  Volhynian  dialects,  Podilian  dialects,
                            Dniester dialects, Sian dialects, Bukovyna-Pokutia dialects, Hutsul
                            dialect,  Boiko  dialect,  Middle-Transcarpathian  dialects,  and













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