Bulgarian phonology


This article discusses the phonological system of Standard Bulgarian. Most scholars agree that contemporary Bulgarian has 45 phonemes but different authors place the real number of Bulgarian phonemes between 42 and 47, depending on whether one includes or excludes phonemes which appear primarily only in borrowed foreign words.

Vowels

FrontCentralBack
Highи у,
Midе ъ, о,
Lowа,

Bulgarian vowels may be grouped in three pairs according to their backness: the front vowels е and и, the central vowels а and ъ and the back vowels о and у. In stressed syllables, six vowels are phonemic. Unstressed vowels tend to be shorter and weaker compared to their stressed counterparts, and the corresponding pairs of open and closed vowels approach each other with a tendency to merge, above all as low vowels are raised and shift towards the high ones. However, the coalescence is not always complete. The vowels are often distinguished in emphatic or deliberately distinct pronunciation, and reduction is strongest in colloquial speech. Besides that, some linguists distinguish two degrees of reduction, as they have found that a clearer distinction tends to be maintained in the syllable immediately preceding the stressed one. The complete merger of the pair – is regarded as most common, while the status of vs is less clear. The coalescence of and is not allowed in formal speech and is regarded as a provincial dialectal feature; instead, unstressed is both raised and centralized, approaching. The vowel itself does not exist as a phoneme in other Slavic languages, though a similar reduced vowel transcribed as does occur.

Semivowels

The Bulgarian language possesses only one semivowel:. Orthographically it is represented by the Cyrillic letter as in най , тролей , except when it precedes or , in which case each of the two phonemes is represented by a single letter, respectively or : e.g. ютия , but Йордан .

Consonants

Bulgarian has a total of 35 consonant phonemes. Three additional phonemes can also be found, but only in foreign proper names such as Хюстън , Дзержински , and Ядзя,. They are, however, normally not considered part of the phonetic inventory of the Bulgarian language. The Bulgarian obstruent consonants are divided into 12 pairs of voiced and voiceless consonants. The only obstruent without a counterpart is the voiceless velar fricative. The voicing contrast is neutralized in word-final position, where all obstruents are voiceless, at least with regard to the official orthoepy of the contemporary Bulgarian spoken language ; this neutralization is, however, not reflected in the spelling.
An alternative analysis, however, treats the palatalized variants of consonant sounds as sequences of the consonant and . This effectively reduces the consonant inventory to merely 22 phonemes. No ambiguity rises from such analysis since the palatalized consonants occur only before vowels, and never before other consonants or in the syllable coda as they do in some other languages with palatalized consonants.
According to, are dental. He also analyzes as palatalized dental nasal, and provides no information about the place of articulation of.
Only as an allophone of and before and. For example, инфлация .
As an allophone of before and. Examples: тънко , танго .
is voiced at word boundaries before voiced obstruents. Example: видях го .
Described as having "only slight friction".
Not a native phoneme, but appears in borrowings from English, where it is often vocalised as or pronounced as a fricative in older borrowings which have come through German or Russian. It is always written as the Cyrillic letter ⟨у⟩ in Bulgarian orthography although a small number of people have suggested the use of ⟨ў⟩ in such cases. That suggestion for the use of ⟨ў⟩ hasn't gained any widespread use, however.
can be analyzed as an allophone of, as it appears only before front vowels. A trend of l-vocalization is emerging among younger native speakers and more often in colloquial speech.

Hard and palatalized consonants

Like a number of Eastern Slavic languages, most consonant phonemes come in "hard" and "soft" pairs. The latter tend to feature palatalization, or the raising of the tongue toward the hard palate. Thus, for example, contrasts with by the latter being palatalized. The consonants,,, and are considered hard and do not have palatalized variants, though they may have palatalization in some speakers' pronunciation.
The distinction between hard and soft consonants is clear in Bulgarian orthography, where hard consonants are considered normal and precede either,,,, or. Soft consonants appear before,, or. In certain contexts, the contrast hard/soft contrast is neutralized. For example, in Eastern dialects, only soft consonants appear before and. varies: one of its allophones, involving a raising of the back of the tongue and a lowering of its middle part, occurs in all positions, except before the vowels and, where a more "clear" version with a slight raising of the middle part of the tongue occurs. The latter pre-front realization is traditionally called "soft l". In some Western Bulgarian dialects, this allophonic variation does not exist.
Furthermore, in the speech of many young people the more common and arguably velarized allophone of is often realized as a labiovelar approximant. This phenomenon, sometimes colloquially referred to as мързеливо л in Bulgaria, was first registered in the 1970s and isn't connected to original dialects. Similar developments, termed L-vocalization, have occurred in many languages, including Polish, Slovene, Serbo-Croatian, Brazilian Portuguese and certain dialects of English such as Cockney and AAVE.

Palatalization

During the palatalization of most hard consonants, the middle part of the tongue is lifted towards the palate, resulting in the formation of a second articulatory centre whereby the specific palatal "clang" of the soft consonants is achieved. The articulation of alveolars, and, however, usually does not follow that rule; the palatal clang is achieved by moving the place of articulation further back towards the palate so that, and are actually alveopalatal consonants. Soft and are articulated not on the velum but on the palate and are considered palatal consonants.

Word stress

Stress is not usually marked in written text. In cases where the stress must be indicated, a grave accent is placed on the vowel of the stressed syllable.
Bulgarian word stress is dynamic. Stressed syllables are louder and longer than unstressed ones. As in Russian and other East Slavic languages, Bulgarian stress is also lexical rather than fixed as in French, Latin or the West Slavic languages. It may fall on any syllable of a polysyllabic word, and its position may vary depending on the inflection and derivation, for example:
Bulgarian stress is also distinctive: the following examples are not only differentiated by stress :
Stress usually isn't signified in written text, even in the above examples, if the context makes the meaning clear. However, the grave accent may be written if confusion is likely.
The stress is often written in order to signify a dialectal deviation from the standard pronunciation: