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Home > Low German language


Language classification
Indo-European languages
Germanic languages
West Germanic languages
Low German languages

Subdivisions

Low German (in Low German, Platt(düütsch) or Nedderdüütsch) is any of a variety of West Germanic languages spoken in northern Germany and the Netherlands. It also includes Afrikaans, which is spoken in South Africa, and Plautdietsch, which is spoken by Mennonite communities in North America. Low German was the lingua franca of the Hanseatic LeagueThe foundations of the Hanseatic League an alliance of trading cities that for a time in the later Middle Ages and the Early Modern period maintained a trade monopoly over most of Northern Europe and the Baltic, can be seen as early as the 12th century..

Low German is also sometimes used to refer to any German dialect which differs from the official German languageGerman (called Deutsch in German in which germanisch refers to prechristian times), is a member of the western group of Germanic languages and one of the world's major languages. It is the language with the most native speakers in the European Union., but this is not linguistic use. It tends to lead to confusion when discussing the German language: many High GermanHigh German (in German, Hochdeutsch please note that Hochdeutsch is also used to refered to today's standard German) is any of several West Germanic languages spoken in Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, and Luxembourg (as well as in neighbouri dialects are called Low German, a term properly used only for the dialects and languages described here.

The term "Low German" is often restricted to Low Saxon, one of its three main branches, or extended to all of West Germanic except for High German. We cut a middle path in this article. The other branches of Low German (besides Low Saxon) are Low Franconian and East Low German. The other branches of West Germanic (besides Low German and High German) are Frisian and English. The northern dialects of Low German (Low Saxon and Dutch) can also be classified together with English and Frisian as the North Sea Germanic or Ingvaeonic languages.

Low German is distinguished from High German principally in that the latter underwent a consonant shift in the 700s and 800s. In High German, /k/, /p/, /t/ became /(k)x/ (only in some dialects), /pf/, /ts/ in initial positions and /x/, /f/, /s/ in medial and final positions. In Low German (as well as English and Frisian), the old /k/, /p/, /t/ are still there, as in English "better", Dutch "beter", German "besser".


Low German (North Saxon): Ik segg et/dat up Nedderdüütsch/Platt(düütsch).
Low German (Mennonite Plautdietsch): Ekj/Etj saje et op Nadadietsch/Plautdietsch.
Standard Dutch: Ik zeg het in het Nederduits/Platduits.
High (Standard) German: Ich sage es auf Niederdeutsch/Platt(deutsch).
English: I say it in Low German.




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