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  1. Lower Silesian. Silesian (Silesian: Schläsisch, Schläs’sch, Schlä’sch, Schläsch, German: Schlesisch ), Silesian German or Lower Silesian is a nearly extinct German dialect spoken in Silesia. It is part of the East Central German language area with some West Slavic and Lechitic influences. Silesian German emerged as the result of Late ...

  2. Western High Alemannic includes Bernese German, the German dialects of Solothurn and Fribourg, as well as most dialects of Aargau and the northern parts of the canton of Lucerne. Features [ edit ] The distinctive feature of the High Alemannic dialects is the completion of the High German consonant shift , for instance chalt [xalt] 'cold' vs. Low Alemannic and standard German 'kalt' [kʰalt] .

  3. Old High German (OHG; German: Althochdeutsch (Ahdt., Ahd.)) is the earliest stage of the German language, conventionally identified as the period from around 500/750 to 1050. Rather than representing a single supra-regional form of German, Old High German encompasses the numerous West Germanic dialects that had undergone the set of consonantal changes called the Second Sound Shift .

  4. Do you mean real Low German, or do you refer to de:Pomerano (there called a "Mischsprache", i.e. a mixed language) or Plautdietsch (in ISO 639-3 pdt and a different language than nds = Low Saxon)?--Naramaru 15:09, 23 December 2021 (UTC) Reply FWIW: regardless of ISO-codes, Plautdietsch emerged from the historical Low German dialect continuum.

  5. Dutch Low Saxon ( Nederlaands Leegsaksies [ˈneːdərlaːnts ˈleːxsɑksis] or Nederlaands Nedersaksies; Dutch: Nederlands Nedersaksisch) are the Low Saxon dialects of the Low German language that are spoken in the northeastern Netherlands and are written there with local, unstandardised orthographies based on Standard Dutch orthography .

  6. English. Frisian. Dutch. Low German. High German. Dots indicate areas where multilingualism is common. The West Germanic Languages are a branch of Germanic languages first spoken in Central Europe and the British Isles. The branch has three parts: the North Sea Germanic languages, the Weser-Rhine Germanic languages, and the Elbe Germanic languages.

  7. Northern Low German ( Standard High German: nördliches Niederdeutsch) is a variety of Low German in Germany, distinguished from Southern Low German. [1] There are radio stations mainly speaking Northern Low German in Paraguay, Brazil and Canada. [citation needed] In Germany, it is spoken about until the Ruhr area.