GERMANIC: PLAUTDIETSCH & PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN/DUTCH

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Beautiful video Andy pure poetry, magical, charming, the Saxon and Franconian influence each other and walk together, they have differences but they share phonetics and common words too. And there are phonetics, sometimes far, close and similar and equal, they are neighboring and married regional languages, even though they are different, and due to their cultural and spatial neighborhood, they can understand each other a little. Show kiss on the heart thanks 😙🌹🍷🌠

SinarNila
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This is a great video. It's cool to see these side by side as they're both German languages brought to the America's however Plautdietsch descends from low German dialects while Pennsylvania German descends from Central German dialects and thus you can see the high German sound shift apparent in Pennsylvania German and not in Plautdietsch

fgconnolly
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Low German Prussian Mennonite and Hutteritte. Plautdietsch or Mennonite Low German, was originally a fusion of a variety of Low Prussian (Baltic language) and East Low German (Saxon), with influence and contact with Dutch (Dutch or Low Francic), which developed in the 16th and 17th centuries in the area of the Vistula river delta of Royal Prussia (former Baltic country whose coastline was on the North Sea in the current Kaliningrad region bordered by Lithuania to the north and Poland to the south and west). Known as German Hutterite (Hutterisch) is a dialect of the German language. It is spoken in Canada and the United States. And by the Hutterite Mennonite diaspora in Mexico, Paraguay and Brazil. It was the phonetics of this Prussian German language that a little later reformed standard German, taking the Thuringian and Frankish phonetics from German, and then causing the emergence of today's modern German. This all happened when Prussia unified Germany into a single country and removed the cultural influence of Saxony and Austria once and for all in the standard German language, a time of the German Prussian empire when Otto von Bismarck was chancellor of the unified country and became an empire and won Napoleon and french empire.

Base: Deutsch Idioms.

SinarNila
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Beautiful video made by a magical soul my little star andy 🌹🌹🌹🌹🍷🍷🍷🍷🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠

SinarNila
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Some Frankish languages. The Rhenish Frankish Palatine Frankish (Pälzisch, in German Pfälzisch) is spoken in the Palatinate of Germany. Rhenish Frankish is also spoken in the USA, by the Amish, and in Pennsylvania, where the descendants of German immigrants live, it is called German Pennsylvanian in the correct and technical way. Luxembourgish and Frankish Mosselan are also sister languages to these others. This entire subfamily is the middle Frankish. Another Franconian sister subfamily is from Lower Franconian, where Dutch, Limburgish and Afrikaans are found. There is the transitional Frankish uniting the low and middle Frankic and the Hunskerian spoken in Germany in the south of Westphalia and the Palatinate region and in the Hunskirish region and in Brazil. Apart from Afrikaans, Dutch and Luxembourgish, the remaining Frankish languages are known as Franconian Plattdeutsch, between Frankish they have high intelligibility.
Base: Deutsch Idioms.

SinarNila
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Can you please do Ningbo Wu vs Fuyang Wu? I am Chinese, although not a native Wu speaker, but I like to hear the differences between these two dialects.

davidlurhfan
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great video andy
i hope easy german does a video on these out of kountry dialekts sometime soon

creeperking
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Dutch or German? It is a big difference.

DiriaMeneam
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