Vlaški/Žejanski/Istro-Romanian – Croatian Dictionary
bârhån
-u, -e, -ele n (J)
haljina; ânmestítę-n musåte bârhåne (S) - odjevena u lijepe haljine.
bấrsę
-a, -e, -ele (J, Ž), bấrsa, -e, -ele (Ž) ž
vreća (i torba); a bấrsa de slåmę (Suc) - vreća slame; o bấrsa de cârbúr (Ž) - vreća ugljena.
bấrstine
-ele ž mn. (Ž)
šiblje, granje; cúćiţa načiníta de lę́mne şi bấrstine - kolibica napravljena od drva i granja (šiblja).
báş
pril. (J, Ž)
baš, upravo; ţấste zíle báş ploi̭ę́ t″åro (S) - ovih dana baš jako kiši; nú mi s-a báş dåt mę́re t″å (K) - nije mi se baš dalo otići; ča-i̭ báş právę i̭ístinę (K) - to je baš prava istina.
When searching words, you can paste in accented characters/diacritics, or type the characters with no diacritics. (For example: To find the verb “acaţå” paste in “acaţå” or type in “acata” without the special character ţ and diacritic ˚.) If the word is reflexive, you can leave the “se” off. (For example: If you search for the verb “abåte,” the search will return both the transitive “abåte” and the reflexive “abåte se.”
This is a handy guide for nonspecifics in the graphical system used to write the Vlach or Žejanski (ie, Istrian) language in this dictionary. We provide approximate Croatian and English voice equivalents for the letters most often used in the dictionary.
Diacritics combining with letters for different vowels:
́́´ Marks the placement of the word stress.
˜ Marks a nasalized vowel.
We refer linguists and other specialists to pp. 9-15 and pp. 246-255 of the original print dictionary—Istrorumunjski-hrvatski rječnik (s gramatikom i tekstovima) [insert hyperlink to Bibliography] by August Kovačec—for a detailed and technical introduction to the transcription system used in the dictionary. In the main,Kovačec’s spelling system follows the long, while rather inconsistent, tradition of spelling used by Romanian dialectologists to represent the language, while adding some special symbols to it. There is no standardized and/or agreed upon version of the spelling for the language. Kovčec’s transcription is largely phonological (i.e., it represents only distinctive sounds), but also often indicates characteristic phonetic variations.
