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Low Prussian (German: Niederpreußisch), sometimes known simply as Prussian (Preußisch), is a moribund dialect of Northern Low German that developed in East Prussia. Low Prussian was spoken in East and West Prussia and Danzig up to 1945. In Danzig it formed the particular city dialect of Danzig German.
- Germans, (Prussian and Saxon subgroups)
Plautdietsch ( pronounced [ˈplaʊt.ditʃ]) or Mennonite Low German is a Low Prussian dialect of East Low German with Dutch influence that developed in the 16th and 17th centuries in the Vistula delta area of Royal Prussia.
- 450,000 (2007)
The German regional dialect of Low German spoken in Prussia (or West Prussia and East Prussia), called Low Prussian (cf. High Prussian, also a German dialect), preserved a number of Baltic Prussian words, such as Kurp, from the Old Prussian kurpe, for shoe in contrast to common Low German: Schoh (Standard German Schuh), as did the ...
- Early 18th century
- Attempted revival, with at least 50 L2 speakers (no date)
Low Prussian dialect. A. Ännchen von Tharau. M. Elbingian. Mundart des Kürzungsgebiets. Eastern Low Prussian. Natangian. Nehrungisch. Ostkäslausch. Samlandic. Vistulan dialect. Werdersch. Westkäslausch. Hidden category:
Eastern Low Prussian (German: Mundart des Ostgebietes, lit. dialect of the Eastern territory ) is a subdialect of Low Prussian that was spoken around Angerburg (now Węgorzewo , Poland ), Insterburg ( Chernyakhovsk , Russia ), Memelland ( Klaipėda County , Lithuania ), and Tilsit ( Sovetsk, Kaliningrad Oblast , Russia ) in the ...
Their East Low German dialect is still to be classified as Low Prussian, or simply Prussian. Beginning in the late 1700s, the expanding Russian Empire invited Germans and many from the Kingdom of Prussia, including many Mennonites left and created new colonies north of the Black Sea in (present-day Ukraine and other countries), in an area that Russia had recently acquired in one of the Russo ...
The Vistulan dialect ( German: Dialekt des Weichselgebietes, lit. 'dialect of the Vistula region') was a dialect of Low Prussian, which belongs to Low German. The dialect was spoken in West Prussia (today in Poland) around Zarnowitzer See, Danzig and Graudenz. [1] . It had a border to Mundart der Weichselwerder. [1] . It is related to Nehrungisch .