Dwarven dialects

The Dwarven language is can be subdivided into a large amount of dialects - after all, each clan has its own dialect or accent, and given how there are roughly 200 000 Dwarves, with each clan consisting of 500-1000 individuals on average, there could be around 300 distinct dialects/accents. These are all, for the most part mutually intelligible, with the main difference being pronounciation. The large amount of dialects or accents be neatly categorized into five groups (Conservative Southern, Innovative Southern, Conservative Northern, Innovative Northern, Isolates), out of which the first four categories constitute a two-dimensional distinction of Northern vs Southern and Conservative vs Innovative. Isolated or insular dialects would be dialects with Northern features spoken in the South or vice versa.

Northern vs Southern
Northern dialects are characterized by sound shifts (or lack thereof) involving coronal consonants. For example, the historical, Early Classical Dwarven is consistently pronounced as a coronal rhotic  in the Northern dialects, as opposed to the Southern uvular. In contrast, Southern dialects have shifted the historical broad rhotic into a uvular, and they don't usually introduce retroflex sounds, instead being richer in uvular ones. Both Northern and Southern dialects generally pronounce the slender rhotic as a palatalized (post)alveolar trill.

Conservative vs Innovative

 * Conservative dialects have a phonology very similar to that of Dwarven Koiné, as well as grammar and vocabulary almost identical to it. These dialects also contain some archaicisms present in Classical Dwarven but lost in Contemporary Dwarven Koiné. For example, some Conservative dialects even preserve the non-sibilant affricates of Early Classical Dwarven that were deaffricated in Late Classical Dwarven and thus absent in both the majority of dialects and in Contemporary Dwarven Koiné. The vowels are mostly identical to that of the koiné, though some dialects may preserve the original long vowels  instead of diphthongizing them  like the Koiné and the majority of dialects.
 * Innovative dialects, as their name suggests, have went through their own sound shifts that made them unique, and different from their conservative counterparts. Rather than preserving archaicisms, they introduce innovations that are not yet part of the standard language, and probably will never be.

Conservative Southern
Conservative Southern Dwarven is perhaps the one dialect group that is closest to Dwarven Koiné. The broad dorsal is consistently pronounced as a uvular trill, just like in the standard koiné language. Some dialects may preserve the long vowels that were shifted into diphthongs in the koiné and the majority of dialects, and an even smaller minority of dialects also preserve the non-sibilant affricates of Early Classical Dwarven. The vocabulary and the grammar is mostly identical to that of the Koiné, though it may preserve some archaicisms.

Innovative Southern
Innovative Southern Dwarven experiments with uvular consonants - for example, the broad dorsal is not only pronounced as a uvular, but is often vocalized. Before a word boundary or another consonant, are respectively pronounced as  or. Additionally, are typically realized as uvular  - this often causes  and  to merge completely, due to their similarity. Because the voiced uvular stop is difficult to articulate, it may be fronted, devoiced  or lenited. Some dialects also realize the broad as a velar  or uvular. may also be pronounced as a labiovelar in the syllable onset, though not in the coda.

Conservative Northern
Conservative Northern Dwarven is perhaps the one dialect group that preserves the most from Early Classical Dwarven. The broad dorsal is consistently pronounced as a velarized (post)alveolar trill, and unlike in the more innovative dialects, this rhotic does not colour preceding vowels. Some dialects may preserve the long vowels that were shifted into diphthongs in the koiné and the majority of dialects, and an even smaller minority of dialects also preserve the non-sibilant affricates of Early Classical Dwarven. The grammar is mostly identical to that of the Koiné, but the vocabulary is rich in archaicisms absent in both the koiné and the Conservative Southern dialects.

Innovative Northern
Innovative Northern Dwarven experiments with retroflex consonants. For example, the broad dorsal is pronounced as a retroflex. Additionally, clusters such as are pronounced as, ,  or just  This creates a whole new set of retroflex non-sibilants  - the clusters  can be assibilated. In addition to that, the when followed by a word boundary or another consonant, are respectively pronounced as. The slender dorsal stops are pronounced as palatal, and may be subject to affrication. The broad dorsal remain velar.

Isolated dialects
Isolated dialects in Dwarven are a phenomenon, when a dialect is spoken in an area where it would be out of place. For example, a Southern-sounding dialect with Uvular Rs spoken in the North, of a Northern-sounding dialect with Retroflex Rs spoken in the South. Contrary to the popular belief, not all such dialects are a result of recent migrations of clans. The majority of isolated dialects are conservative - only a few innovative isolated dialects were reported.