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  1. 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 ...

  2. The northern Russian dialects make up one of the main groups of the Russian dialects. Territory [ edit ] The territory of the primary formation (e.g. that consist of "Old" Russia of the 16th century before Eastern conquests by Ivan IV ) is fully or partially modern regions ( oblasts ): Vologda , Kostroma , Yaroslavl , Novgorod , Leningrad , Nizhny Novgorod , Arkhangelsk .

  3. The territory of the primary formation (i.e. that consists of "Old" Russia of the 16th century before Eastern conquests by Ivan IV) is entirely 11 modern regions ( oblasts ): Belgorod, Bryansk, Kaluga, Kursk, Lipetsk, Oryol, Ryazan, Smolensk, Tambov, Tula, Voronezh; and some southern parts of 3 regions: Moscow, Pskov, and Tver.

  4. Dialectos hessianos. El hessiano (en alemán Hessisch) es un grupo de dialectos del alemán central occidental, hablados en el estado de Hesse (Alemania central). El dialecto más similar al hessiano es el alemán del Palatinado ( Pfälzisch) de la subfamilia fráncica renana. No obstante, los dialectos de Hesse poseen características que los ...

  5. Hessian. North Hessian (Nordhessisch) East Hessian (Osthessisch) Central Hessian (Mittelhessisch) South Hessian (Südhessisch) East Central German (Ostmitteldeutsch) Thuringian (Thüringisch) Upper Saxon (Obersächsisch) Erzgebirgisch; Nordobersächsisch-Südmärkisch; Lusatian; East Central German dialects spoken in the former eastern territories:

  6. Thuringian dialects are among the Central German dialects with the highest number of speakers. History [ edit ] Thuringian emerged during the medieval German Ostsiedlung migration from about 1100, when settlers from Franconia ( Main Franconia), Bavaria , Saxony , and Flanders settled in the areas east of the Saale River previously inhabited by Polabian Slavs .

  7. Franconian or Frankish is a collective term traditionally used by linguists to refer to many West Germanic languages, some of which are spoken in what formed the historical core area of Francia during the Early Middle Ages . Linguistically, it has no common typological features for all the various dialects conventionally grouped as Franconian.