Gothenburg_dialect

Gothenburg dialect

Gothenburg dialect

Swedish dialect


The Gothenburg dialect (Swedish: göteborgska) is the form of Swedish spoken in the city of Gothenburg with surroundings, and forms a part of the Götamål dialect area of western Sweden.

Kal & Ada symbolize Gothenburg's population and dialect. This sculpture is made in bronze by Svenrobert Lundquist and was unveiled in 1995 at Liseberg.

History

The origins of the Gothenburg dialect can be traced to the industrialisation of the city in the late 19th century.[1] The demand for factory workers caused rapid population growth through a large influx of people from the countryside, bringing with them their local dialects. These mainly belonged to the Götamål dialects, but also more distant Swedish dialects. As the new urban population adapted their speech, the different dialects mixed to create a new regional standard, and the children of the newcomers to the city—the second generation of Gothenburgers—were the first to natively speak what developed to become the Gothenburg dialect in the late 19th and early 20th century.[2][3] One of the earliest uses of the word Göteborgsdialekten ("the Gothenburg dialect") is found in an 1891 article in the local newspaper Göteborgs Weckoblad.[4] The Gothenburg dialect is as such a relatively new dialect compared to other Götamål dialects.[5]

The dialect has been gradually converging with Standard Swedish over time, while some specific aspects of the dialect also have been intensified.[6] At the same time, the dialect is spreading throughout Metropolitan Gothenburg and gaining ground in the more traditional Götamål-speaking areas outside the city.[3] A study of secondary school students in the late 1990s found that the strongest dialectal aspects were found among students in the surrounding municipalities rather than in Gothenburg Municipality itself.[7] The municipalities of Kungälv, Kungsbacka, Lerum, and Stenungsund now form part of the dialect continuum, while localities on the fringes of the metropolitan area like Uddevalla and Borås hold on to their more traditional dialects, like Västgötska.[3]

Status

Most speakers of the dialect are proud of it, and the Gothenburg dialect is also popular among other Swedes who commonly view it as happy, carefree, open, and sexy.[3][8]


Citations

  1. Andersson 2019, pp. 34–35.
  2. Andersson 2019, pp. 35–38, 41.
  3. Nilsson 2020, 0 minutes in.
  4. Andersson 2019, pp. 26–27.
  5. Andersson 2019, pp. 27–28.

References

  • Andersson, Lars-Gunnar (2019). Göteborgsgrammatik (in Swedish). Stockholm: Morfem. ISBN 978-91-88419-13-2.
  • Ekstrand, Lena (27 March 2016). "Göteborgskan breder ut sig" (in Swedish). Göteborgs-Posten. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  • Lindström, Fredrik (2015). "Så blev det gôrgôtt på Västkusten". Språktidningen (in Swedish). No. 7. Vetenskapsmedia. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  • Nilsson, Jenny (host) (2020). "8". Göteborgska. Svenska förklarad (in Swedish). UR. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  • Rasper, Emmy (host); Rosenkvist, Henrik (guest) (16 September 2019). Är du go eller? Göteborgska eller?. Språket (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  • Schånberg, Sven (2013). Kals odbok: göteborgskt skaplynne i språkets spegel (in Swedish). Göteborg: Tre Böcker. ISBN 978-91-7029-353-5.

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