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  1. The Duchy of Swabia ( German: Herzogtum Schwaben; Latin: Ducatus Allemaniæ) was one of the five stem duchies of the medieval German Kingdom. It arose in the 10th century in the southwestern area that had been settled by Alemanni tribes in Late Antiquity . While the historic region of Swabia takes its name from the ancient Suebi, dwelling in ...

  2. Swabian sentence of deepest philosophical meaning, impossible to translate.. a'ranze vb.: scold; come down on someone; to dump on some. arg adv.: 1. bad; serious; 2. swabian superlative; ~ schee very beautyful; ~ wiaschd coyote-ugly. Arsch m.: as (s. Fiedle); Leck mi am ~! Kiss my ass! (common swabian curse, originally "Leck mich im ~" by Götz ...

  3. Elbe Germanic, also called Irminonic or Erminonic, [2] is a term introduced by the German linguist Friedrich Maurer (1898–1984) in his book, Nordgermanen und Alemanen, to describe the unattested proto-language, or dialectal grouping, ancestral to the later Lombardic, Alemannic, Bavarian and Thuringian dialects.

  4. The feature that distinguishes Low Alemannic from Swabian is the retention of the Middle High German monophthongs, for instance Huus 'house' vs. Swabian Hous or Ziit 'time' vs. Swabian Zejt. Orthography (All of the below is specific to the dialects spoken near Freiburg im Breisgau) Vowels:

  5. Aug 8, 2018 · Standard German ( Hochdeutsch) can sound quite harsh at times, but the further south we have headed, the more intimate and musical the language has become to our ears. The dialects weren’t too hard for us to understand, until we ended up near Swabia, the region containing the Black Forest in the southwest of Germany.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MuggeseggeleMuggeseggele - Wikipedia

    Muggeseggele, or Muckenseckel, is a humorous Alemannic German idiom used in Swabia to designate a nonspecific very small length or amount of something; it refers to a housefly 's scrotum. [1] [2] It has been called the smallest Swabian unit of measurement [3] [4] and plays a similar role in northern Baden-Württemberg [5] and Franconia .

  7. Franconian or Frankish is a collective term traditionally used by linguists to refer to many West Germanic languages, some of which are spoken in what formed the historical core area of Francia during the Early Middle Ages . Linguistically, it has no common typological features for all the various dialects conventionally grouped as Franconian.

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