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  1. The Ripuarian varieties are related to the Moselle Franconian languages spoken in the southern Rhineland (Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland) in Germany, to the Luxembourgish language in Luxembourg, and to the Low Franconian Limburgish language in the Dutch province of Limburg.

  2. Ripuarian (/ ˌ r ɪ p j u ˈ ɛər i ə n /; also Ripuarian Franconian; German: Ripuarisch, ripuarische Mundart, ripuarischer Dialekt, ripuarisch-fränkische Mundart, Ribuarisch) is a variant of West Central German

  3. Ripuarian is a variety of Central Franconian spoken in central Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium by about 900,000 people. It is spoken in North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany, in Liège in Belgium, and in Limburg the Netherlands.

  4. The Wikipedia of Ripuarian languages (Kölsch: Wikipedia op Ripoarisch Platt) is the Ripuarian edition of Wikipedia. It was started on July 6, 2005, as WiKoelsch on a private server, and was converted to an official Wikipedia during April 2006.

  5. Junto con el luxemburgués, el fráncico moselano y el fráncico renano constituye la familia dialectal del fráncico central, siendo su variedad más noroccidental. Su nombre proviene de los francos ripuarios, un pueblo franco que se estableció a orillas del Rin a partir del siglo IV .

  6. Ripuarian or Rhineland Franks (Latin: Ripuarii or Ribuarii) were one of the two main groupings of early Frankish people, and specifically it was the name eventually applied to the tribes who settled in the old Roman territory of the Ubii, with its capital at Cologne on the Rhine river in modern Germany.

  7. Standard Dutch: Kerkraads, Standard German: (die) Mundart von Kerkrade [3] meaning (the) dialect of Kerkrade) is a Ripuarian dialect spoken in Kerkrade and its surroundings, including Herzogenrath in Germany. [1] It is spoken in all social classes, but the variety spoken by younger people in Kerkrade is somewhat closer to Standard Dutch.