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Both Burgundian dialects feature historical diphthongs not longer extant in other dialects, where they merged with another vowel. [[w:Proto-Germanic language|Proto-Germanic]] ''*ō'', ''*eu'' which merged with {{angbr|u, i}} elsewhere, remained {{angbr|uo, ie}} in the Burgundian dialects – for instance, '''{{term|buoce}}''' and '''{{term|friesare}}'''. They also share the presence of {{angbr|y}} (/{{IPA|y}}/), descended from earlier ''*iu''; '''{{term|dydere}}''' (central '''{{term|didere}}'''). | Both Burgundian dialects feature historical diphthongs not longer extant in other dialects, where they merged with another vowel. [[w:Proto-Germanic language|Proto-Germanic]] ''*ō'', ''*eu'' which merged with {{angbr|u, i}} elsewhere, remained {{angbr|uo, ie}} in the Burgundian dialects – for instance, '''{{term|buoce}}''' and '''{{term|friesare}}'''. They also share the presence of {{angbr|y}} (/{{IPA|y}}/), descended from earlier ''*iu''; '''{{term|dydere}}''' (central '''{{term|didere}}'''). | ||
The [[:Category:High Burgundian dialect|High Burgundian dialect]] ('''avendoniano ocburgundico''') features the {{Abbtip|High German consonant shift|HGCS}}. [[:Category:Low Burgundian dialect|Low Burgundian]] (''' | The [[:Category:High Burgundian dialect|High Burgundian dialect]] ('''avendoniano ocburgundico''') features the {{Abbtip|High German consonant shift|HGCS}}. [[:Category:Low Burgundian dialect|Low Burgundian]] ('''avendoniano lagburgundico''') does not. Instead, masculine o-stem nouns and regular adjectives drop their final '''-o''', except in those words whose Proto-Germanic ancestor stem ended in /{{IPA|w}}/. | ||
Those words are: | Those words are: | ||
{{Col-begin}} | {{Col-begin}} |