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  1. 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 .

  2. Hessian ( German: Hessisch) is a West Central German group of dialects of the German language in the central German state of Hesse. The dialect most similar to Hessian is Palatinate German ( German: Pfälzisch) of the Rhine Franconian sub-family. However, the Hessian dialects have some features which set them somewhat apart from other West ...

  3. The name "hessian" is attributed to the historic use of the fabric as part of the uniform of soldiers from the former Landgraviate of Hesse (1264–1567) and its successors, who were called Hessians. [10] Hessian cloth [11] comes in different types of construction, form, size and color. The origin of the word burlap is uncertain, [10] [12 ...

  4. 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 ...

  5. Dialeutos. El hessiano puede subdividise en cuatro dialeutos principales: Hessiano septentrional (alredor de la ciudá de Kassel);; Hessiano central (zones de Marburgu y Gießen);

  6. Central German dialects after 1945. 10: Silesian -Lusatian. The Lusatian dialects ( Standard German: Lausitzisch) are East Central German ( High German) dialects spoken in southern Brandenburg and eastern Saxony. The name "Lusatian" derives from the term Lusatia, meaning the dialects of Lusatia. They are most closely related to Silesian German .

  7. Map showing the provinces of Drenthe (most of the area in green tones) and Overijssel (mostly grey; with small regions in dark green south of Drenthe) Drèents (also Dreins, Dreints, Drents, Drints; Dutch: Drents) is a collective term for Westphalian dialects spoken in Drenthe, a province of the Netherlands. They are spoken by about half of the ...