Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. East Low German ( German: ostniederdeutsche Dialekte, ostniederdeutsche Mundarten, Ostniederdeutsch) is a group of Low German dialects spoken in north-eastern Germany as well as by minorities in northern Poland. Together with West Low German dialects, it forms a dialect continuum of the Low German language. Before 1945, the dialect was spoken ...

  2. Terminology. While Middle Low German (MLG) is a scholarly term developed in hindsight, speakers in their time referred to the language mainly as sassisch (Saxon) or de sassische sprâke (the Saxon language). This terminology was also still known in Luther 's time in the adjacent Central German -speaking areas. [4]

  3. Launched. 16 March 2001; 23 years ago. ( 2001-03-16) The German Wikipedia (German: Deutschsprachige Wikipedia) is the German-language edition of Wikipedia, a free and publicly editable online encyclopedia . Founded on March 16, 2001, it is the second-oldest Wikipedia (after the English Wikipedia ). It has 2,910,945 articles, making it the third ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Upper_GermanUpper German - Wikipedia

    3: Swabian German. 4: Low Alemannic. 5: High and Highest Alemannic. Bavarian : 6: Northern Bavarian. 7: Central Bavarian. 8: Southern Bavarian. Upper German ( German: Oberdeutsch [ˈoːbɐdɔʏtʃ] ⓘ) is a family of High German dialects spoken primarily in the southern German-speaking area ( Sprachraum ).

  5. High German heavily influenced by Low German has been known as Missingsch, but most contemporary Northern Germans exhibit only an intermediate Low German substratum in their speech. In German-speaking Switzerland , there is no such continuum between the Swiss German varieties and Swiss Standard German , and the use of Standard German is almost entirely restricted to the written language.

  6. Westphalian or Westfalish ( Standard High German: Westfälisch, Standard Dutch: Westfaals) is one of the major dialect groups of Low German. Its most salient feature is its diphthongization (rising diphthongs). For example, speakers say iäten ( [ɪɛtn̩]) instead of etten or äten for "to eat". (There is also a difference in the use of ...

  7. Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West_Low_German&oldid=1072881378"This page was last edited on 19 February 2022, at 23:15 (UTC). (UTC).