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  1. Continental West Germanic continuum. Historically, the Dutch, Frisian, Low Saxon and High German dialects formed a canonical dialect continuum, which has been gradually falling apart since the Late Middle Ages due to the pressures of modern education, standard languages, migration and weakening knowledge of the dialects.

  2. Mar 31, 2020 · Summary. The continental West Germanic dialect continuum roughly encompasses the territory of modern-day Germany, Austria, the German-speaking part of Switzerland, the Netherlands, the northern half of Belgium (Flanders), Liechtenstein, Luxembourg and South Tyrol, in northern Italy.

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  4. Examples of West Germanic phonological particularities are: [5] The delabialization of all labiovelar consonants except word-initially. [6] Change of *-zw- and *- đw- to *-ww- e.g. *izwiz > *iwwiz 'you' dat.pl.; *feđwōr > *fewwōr 'four'. [7] [ð], the fricative allophone of /d/, becomes [d] in all positions. [8] (.

  5. West Germanic languages, group of Germanic languages that developed in the region of the North Sea, Rhine-Weser, and Elbe. Out of the many local West Germanic dialects the following six modern standard languages have arisen: English, Frisian, Dutch ( Netherlandic -Flemish), Afrikaans, German, and Yiddish.

  6. the grouping of the Germanic languages is the fact that a dialect continuum cannot be constructed to the extent that modern dialect continua are constructed. This is due to the insufficiency of material. There were several major centers for writing in the various Germanic languages historically, but only a small fraction of the geographical areas

    • Michael-Christopher Todd Highlander
    • 2014
  7. Some of the most important dialect continua in Europe are the Western Romance, the West Germanic, and the North Slavic dialect continuum. Also the 27 Dutch dialects that lie on a straight line are a good example of how a dialect continuum looks like. With Levenshtein distances the linguistic distance between all these dialects is calculated.

  8. The Central West-Germanic dialect group includes Central Franconian, Palatinatian (Pfälzisch), Hessian, Thuringian, and Upper Saxon. The Low West-Germanic dialect group includes Lower Franconian, Lower Saxon, East-and Westphalian, Brandenburgish, and Mecklenburgish.

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