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  1. West Germanic languages - Yiddish, Dutch, German: Although there were some 11 million speakers of Yiddish before World War II, approximately half of them were killed in the Nazi Holocaust. There are several million Yiddish speakers today, including native speakers and those who use it as a second language. Most speakers live in the United States and Israel. They are served by literary journals ...

  2. North Germanic: the modern-day Nordic languages Icelandic, Faroese, Norwegian, Elfdalian, Swedish and Danish and their immediate predecessors as well as the now-extinct language varieties of Norn. West Germanic: English, Frisian (West, East and North), Dutch, Low German, High German and their various dialects, derivations and predecessors ...

  3. Nov 9, 2023 · Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by about 25 million people as a first language and 5 million as a second language. It is the third most widely spoken Germanic language, after its close relatives English and German.

  4. Dutch ( Dutch: Nederlands) is a West Germanic language. It comes from the Netherlands and is the country's official language. [3] It is also spoken in the northern half of Belgium (the region called Flanders ), and in the South American country of Suriname.

  5. Germanic languages, Branch of the Indo-European language family, comprising languages descended from Proto-Germanic. These are divided into West Germanic, including English, German, Frisian, Dutch, Afrikaans, and Yiddish; North Germanic, including Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Faeroese (the language of the Faroe Islands); and East Germanic, now extinct, comprising Gothic and the ...

  6. Dutch is a West Germanic language, that originated from the Old Frankish dialects. Among the words with which Dutch has enriched the English vocabulary are: brandy, coleslaw, cookie, cruiser, dock, easel, freight, landscape, spook, stoop, and yacht. Dutch is noteworthy as the language of an outstanding literature, [citation needed] but it also ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AfrikaansAfrikaans - Wikipedia

    West Germanic. Low Franconian. Dutch. Afrikaans; Afrikaans descended from Dutch dialects in the 17th century. It belongs to a West Germanic sub-group, the Low Franconian languages. Other West Germanic languages related to Afrikaans are German, English, the Frisian languages, and the unstandardised languages Low German and Yiddish.

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