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  1. 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.

  2. Local dialects of the West Germanic continuum are oriented towards either Standard Dutch or Standard German, depending on which side of the border they are spoken. [11] Standard varieties may be developed and codified at one or more locations in a continuum until they have independent cultural status (autonomy), a process the German linguist ...

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  4. Old Saxon. Line marking the boundaries of the continental West Germanic dialect continuum. During the Early Middle Ages, the West Germanic languages were separated by the insular development of Old and Middle English on one hand, and by the High German consonant shift on the continent on the other.

    • 52-AB & 52-AC
  5. Alternatively, in a dialect continuum, North Germanic may have shared innovations with first East, then West Germanic prior to the final split. Finally, the chapter examines with which Indo-European branches Germanic shares non-trivial innovations and thus, maybe, a common node on the cladistic tree.

  6. The West Germanic Dialect Continuum. ... Second Language Acquisition of Germanic Languages ... “ L2 cognitive states and the Full Transfer/Full Access model ...

  7. But before I begin, some remarks on the Continental West Germanic dialects are necessary. These dialects establish a so-called dialect continuum, meaning that linguistic differences between neighbouring villages within this continuum are so small that mutual intelligibility is guaranteed, "but the cumulative effect

  8. 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 .

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