Prizren–Timok dialect

The Prizren–Timok dialect (Serbo-Croatian: призренско–тимочки дијалект / prizrensko–timočki dijalekt) is the name given by Serbian linguists to classify transitional Torlakian dialects spoken in Eastern and South Serbia and Kosovo – an area spanning from Prizren in the south to the Timok River in the north – as subdialects of Old-Shtokavian.Its eastern border, starting from Zaječar, roughly forms the border with Bulgaria.
Map of Shtokavian subdialects, according to Pavle Ivić (1988 book). The Prizren-Timok dialects are shown in three colours in the southeastern corner.
ShtokavianSerbo-CroatianTorlakian dialectsSerbiaKosovoPrizrenTimok RiverOld-ShtokavianZaječarBulgariaPrizren–South Morava subdialectVranjeGora speechSvrljig–Zaplanje subdialectTimok–Lužnica subdialectCrna TravaLužnicaLiterary languagesBosnianCroatianMontenegrinSerbianMicrolanguagesBurgenland CroatianMolise CroatianComparison of literary languagesDialectsSmederevo–VršacSlavonian (or Eastern Slavonian)ŠokacZeta–RaškaNeo-ShtokavianYounger Ikavian (or Bosnian–Dalmatian)BunjevacDubrovnikEastern HerzegovinianUžiceŠumadija–VojvodinaChakavianNorthern ChakavianCentral ChakavianSouthern ChakavianSoutheastern ChakavianSouthwestern IstrianKajkavianTorlakianPrizren–South MoravaSvrljig–Zaplanje (or Western Torlakian)Timok–Lužnica (or Eastern Torlakian)EkavianIjekavianIkavianGaj's Latin alphabetMontenegrin alphabetSerbian Cyrillic alphabet (or Vuk's Cyrillic alphabet)Yugoslav BrailleGrammarLoanwordsTurkishPhonologyIllyrian languageIllyrian movementVienna Literary AgreementNovi Sad AgreementDeclaration on the Common LanguageBosnian literatureCroatian literatureVukoviansSerbian literatureMedievalPoetryBaška tabletCodex MarianusHumac tabletSerbian manuscriptsRomano-SerbianSlavonic-SerbianVatican Croatian Prayer BookYugoslav Sign LanguageNorthern Macedonian dialects