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'''High German''' (in ], ''Hochdeutsch''; please note that Hochdeutsch is also used to refered to |
'''High German''' (in ], ''Hochdeutsch''; please note that Hochdeutsch is also used to refered to today's standard German) is any of several ] ]s spoken in ], ], ], ], and ] (as well as in neighbouring portions of ], ] ('']''), ], ], and ] ('']'') and in some areas of former colonial settlement, i.e. in ]). | ||
Alternatively, and especially in Switzerland and Luxembourg, the term "High German" may refer to one High German dialect to the exclusion of all others, ]. | Alternatively, and especially in Switzerland and Luxembourg, the term "High German" may refer to one High German dialect to the exclusion of all others, ]. |
Revision as of 04:58, 25 October 2004
High 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 neighbouring portions of Belgium, France (Alsace), Italy, Poland, and Romania (Transylvania) and in some areas of former colonial settlement, i.e. in Namibia).
Alternatively, and especially in Switzerland and Luxembourg, the term "High German" may refer to one High German dialect to the exclusion of all others, standard written German. In the first context, the "high" refers to the mountainous areas of southern Germany and the Alps; in the second context, the "high" means "official". The term also sometimes includes Yiddish.
The use of High German to refer only to the official German language is not linguistic use, and tends to lead to confusion when discussing the German language: many High German dialects are called Low German, a term properly used for a different (but related) language family. See below.
High German (and Yiddish) are distinguished from other Western Germanic dialects in that they took part in the second (High German) sound shifting of the 8th century and 9th century. To see this, compare German "Pfanne" with English "pan" (/pf/ to /p/), German "zwei" with English "two" (/ts/ to /t/), German "machen" with English "make" (/x/ to /k/). In the High Alemannic dialects of Swiss German, there is a further shift; "Kaffee" (like English "coffee") becomes "Kchafi" (/k/ to /kx/).
The name "High German" contrasts with "Low German", a term variously used to refer to the Low Saxon dialects originating from around the Baltic city of Lübeck; these dialects together with the Low Franconian languages (Dutch, West Flemish, and Afrikaans); or all of the Western Germanic languages other than High German (including English and Frisian).
Family tree
Note that divisions between subfamilies of Germanic are rarely precisely defined; most form continuous clines, with adjacent dialects being mutually intelligible and more separated ones not. In particular, there never has been an original "Proto-High German".
- Middle German
- East Middle German
- Standard German
- Berlin Brandenburgish (mostly in Berlin and Brandenburg)
- Thuringian Upper Saxon (mostly in Thuringia, Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony
- German Lusatian (in Saxony and Brandenburg)
- Lower Silesian (mostly in Lower Silesia, in Poland)
- Transylvanian Saxon (in Transylvania)
- West Middle German
- Middle Franconian
- Rhine Franconian
- Lower Hesse dialects (Hesse)
- Transition area between Middle German and Upper German
- East Franconian
- Main Franconian, colloquially miscalled Franconian because dialects of this sub-family are spoken all over Franconia
- Southern Franconian
- East Franconian
- Pennsylvania German (in the United States and Canada)
- East Middle German
- Upper German
- Alemannic
- Swiss German (mostly in Switzerland)
- Alsatian (in Alsace, in France)
- Swabian (mostly in Schwaben, in Germany)
- Alemán Coloneiro (in Venezuela)
- Walser (originally in the Wallis Canton of Switzerland)
- Austro-Bavarian
- Bavarian (mostly in Bavaria, in Germany)
- Austrian Dialect (in Austria)
- Cimbrian (northeastern Italy)
- Mócheno (Trentino, in Italy)
- Hutterite German (in Canada and the United States)
- Alemannic
- Fränkisch (extinct in the 1800s)