![West Germanic languages](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8xLzFmL0dlcm1hbmljX2xhbmd1YWdlc19pbl9FdXJvcGUucG5nLzE2MDBweC1HZXJtYW5pY19sYW5ndWFnZXNfaW5fRXVyb3BlLnBuZw==.png )
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The West Germanic languages constitute the largest of the three branches of the Germanic family of languages (the others being the North Germanic and the extinct East Germanic languages). The West Germanic branch is classically subdivided into three branches: Ingvaeonic, which includes English, the Low German languages, and the Frisian languages; Istvaeonic, which encompasses Dutch and its close relatives; and Irminonic, which includes German and its close relatives and variants.
West Germanic | |
---|---|
Geographic distribution | Originally between the Rhine, Alps, Elbe, and North Sea; today worldwide |
Native speakers | c. 490 million |
Linguistic classification | Indo-European
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Subdivisions |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-5 | gmw |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Linguasphere | 52-AB & 52-AC |
Glottolog | west2793 |
![]() Extent of Germanic languages in present-day Europe North Germanic languages West Germanic languages High German Dots indicate areas where multilingualism is common. |
English is by far the most-spoken West Germanic language, with more than 1 billion speakers worldwide. Within Europe, the three most prevalent West Germanic languages are English, German, and Dutch. Frisian, spoken by about 450,000 people, constitutes a fourth distinct variety of West Germanic. The language family also includes Afrikaans, Yiddish, Low Saxon, Luxembourgish, Hunsrik, and Scots. Additionally, several creoles, patois, and pidgins are based on Dutch, English, or German.
History
Origins and characteristics
The Germanic languages are traditionally divided into three groups: West, East and North Germanic. In some cases, their exact relation was difficult to determine from the sparse evidence of runic inscriptions, so that some individual varieties have been difficult to classify. This is especially true for the unattested Jutish language; today, most scholars classify Jutish as a West Germanic variety with several features of North Germanic.
Until the late 20th century, some scholars claimed that all Germanic languages remained mutually intelligible throughout the Migration Period, while others hold that speakers of West Germanic dialects like Old Frankish and speakers of Gothic were already unable to communicate fluently by around the 3rd century AD. As a result of the substantial progress in the study of Proto-West Germanic in the early 21st century, there is a growing consensus that East and West Germanic indeed would have been mutually unintelligible at that time, whereas West and North Germanic remained partially intelligible.
Dialects with the features assigned to the western group formed from Proto-Germanic in the late Jastorf culture (c. 1st century BC). The West Germanic group is characterized by a number of phonological, morphological and lexical innovations or archaisms not found in North and East Germanic. Examples of West Germanic phonological particularities are:[page needed]
- The delabialization of all labiovelar consonants except word-initially.
- Change of *-zw- and *- đw- to *-ww- e.g. *izwiz > *iwwiz 'you' dat.pl.; *feđwōr > *fewwōr 'four'.
- [ð], the fricative allophone of /d/, becomes [d] in all positions. (The two other fricatives [β] and [ɣ] are retained.). This must have occurred after *-zw- and *- đw- have become *-ww-.
- Replacement of the second-person singular preterite ending -t with -ī (indicative and subjunctive mood). For more than 150 years there has been a scientific debate on the best explanation of these difficult forms. Today, some linguists, beginning with J. v. Fierlinger in 1885 and followed by R. Löwe (1907), O. Behaghel (1922),Jakob Sverdrup (1927), Hermann Hirt (1932),E. Polomé (1964), W. Meid (1971), E. Hill (2004), K.-H. Mottausch and W. Euler (1992ff.) explain this ending as a relic of the Indo-European aorist tense. Under this assumption, the ending -t would have replaced older -ī(z). Sceptical about this explanation – and mostly explaining these forms as influenced by optative forms – are W. Scherer (1868), (before 1917), Edward Schröder (1921), Bammesberger (1986) and Don Ringe (2014).
- Loss of word-final /z/. Only Old High German preserves it at all (as /r/) and only in single-syllable words. Following the later loss of word-final /a/ and /aN/, this made the nominative and accusative of many nouns identical.
- Loss of final *-a (including from PGmc. *-an#) in polysyllables: e.g. acc. sg. OHG horn vs. ORu. horna 'horn'; this change must have occurred after the loss of word-final /z/.
- West Germanic gemination: lengthening of all consonants except /r/ before /j/.; this change must have occurred after the loss of final *-a.
- Change of Proto-Germanic *e to i before i and j.
A relative chronology of about 20 sound changes from Proto-Northwest Germanic to Proto-West Germanic (some of them only regional) was published by Don Ringe in 2014.
A phonological archaism of West Germanic is the preservation of grammatischer Wechsel in most verbs, particularly in Old High German. This implies the same for West Germanic, whereas in East and North Germanic many of these alternations (in Gothic almost all of them) had been levelled out analogically by the time of the earliest texts.
A common morphological innovation of the West Germanic languages is the development of a gerund.
Common morphological archaisms of West Germanic include:
- The preservation of an instrumental case,
- the preservation of the athematic verbs (e.g. Anglo-Saxon dō(m), Old Saxon dōm, OHG. tōm "I do"),
- the preservation of some traces[which?] of the aorist (in Old English and Old High German, but neither in Gothic nor in North Germanic).
Furthermore, the West Germanic languages share many lexemes not existing in North Germanic and/or East Germanic – archaisms as well as common neologisms. Some lexemes have specific meanings in West Germanic and there are specific innovations in word formation and derivational morphology, for example neologisms ending with modern English -ship (< wgerm. -*skapi, cf. German -schaft) like friendship (< wg. *friund(a)skapi, cf. German Freundschaft) are specific to the West Germanic languages and are thus seen as a Proto West Germanic innovation.
Validity of West Germanic as a subgroup
Since at least the early 20th century, a number of morphological, phonological, and lexical archaisms and innovations have been identified as specifically West Germanic. Since then, individual Proto-West Germanic lexemes have also been reconstructed. Yet, there was a long dispute if these West Germanic characteristics had to be explained with the existence of a West Germanic proto-language or rather with Sprachbund effects. Hans Frede Nielsen's 1981 study Old English and the Continental Germanic Languages made the conviction grow that a West Germanic proto-language did exist. But up until the 1990s, some scholars doubted that there was once a Proto-West Germanic proto-language which was ancestral only to later West Germanic languages. In 2002, Gert Klingenschmitt presented a series of pioneering reconstructions of Proto-West Germanic morphological paradigmas and new views on some early West Germanic phonological changes, and in 2013 the first monographic analysis and description of Proto-West Germanic was published (second edition 2022).
Today, there is a scientific consensus on what Don Ringe stated in 2012, that "these [phonological and morphological] changes amount to a massive evidence for a valid West Germanic clade".
After East Germanic broke off (an event usually dated to the 2nd or 1st century BC), the remaining Germanic languages, the Northwest Germanic languages, divided into four main dialects:[obsolete source] North Germanic, and the three groups conventionally called "West Germanic", namely:
- Northwest Germanic
- North Sea Germanic, ancestral to Anglo-Frisian and Old Saxon
- Weser–Rhine Germanic, ancestral to Old Dutch and present as a substrate or superstrate in some of the Central Franconian and Rhine Franconian dialects of Old High German
- Elbe Germanic, ancestral to the Upper German and most Central German dialects of Old High German, and the extinct Langobardic language.
Although there is quite a bit of knowledge about North Sea Germanic or Anglo-Frisian (because of the characteristic features of its daughter languages, Anglo-Saxon/Old English and Old Frisian), linguists know almost nothing about "Weser–Rhine Germanic" and "Elbe Germanic". In fact, both terms were coined in the 1940s to refer to groups of archaeological findings, rather than linguistic features. Only later were the terms applied to hypothetical dialectal differences within both regions. Even today, the very small number of Migration Period runic inscriptions from the area, many of them illegible, unclear or consisting only of one word, often a name, is insufficient to identify linguistic features specific to the two supposed dialect groups.
Evidence that East Germanic split off before the split between North and West Germanic comes from a number of linguistic innovations common to North and West Germanic,[page needed] including:
- The lowering of Proto-Germanic ē (/ɛː/, also written ǣ) to ā.
- The development of umlaut.
- The rhotacism of /z/ to /r/.
- The development of the demonstrative pronoun ancestral to English this.
Under that view, the properties that the West Germanic languages have in common, separate from the North Germanic languages, are not necessarily inherited from a "Proto-West Germanic" language, but may have spread by language contact among the Germanic languages spoken in Central Europe, not reaching those spoken in Scandinavia or reaching them much later. Rhotacism, for example, was largely complete in West Germanic while North Germanic runic inscriptions still clearly distinguished the two phonemes. There is also evidence that the lowering of ē to ā occurred first in West Germanic and spread to North Germanic later since word-final ē was lowered before it was shortened in West Germanic, but in North Germanic the shortening occurred first, resulting in e that later merged with i. However, there are also a number of common archaisms in West Germanic shared by neither Old Norse nor Gothic. Some authors who support the concept of a West Germanic proto-language claim that, not only shared innovations can require the existence of a linguistic clade, but also that there are archaisms that cannot be explained simply as retentions later lost in the North or East, because this assumption can produce contradictions with attested features of the other branches.[clarification needed]
The debate on the existence of a Proto-West Germanic clade was summarized (2006):
That North Germanic is ... a unitary subgroup [of Proto-Germanic] is completely obvious, as all of its dialects shared a long series of innovations, some of them very striking. That the same is true of West Germanic has been denied, but I will argue in vol. ii that all the West Germanic languages share several highly unusual innovations that virtually force us to posit a West Germanic clade. On the other hand, the internal subgrouping of both North Germanic and West Germanic is very messy, and it seems clear that each of those subfamilies diversified into a network of dialects that remained in contact for a considerable period of time (in some cases right up to the present).
The reconstruction of Proto-West Germanic
Several scholars have published reconstructions of Proto-West Germanic morphological paradigms and many authors have reconstructed individual Proto-West Germanic morphological forms or lexemes. The first comprehensive reconstruction of the Proto-West Germanic language was published in 2013 by Wolfram Euler, followed in 2014 by the study of Donald Ringe and Ann Taylor.
Dating Early West Germanic
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHhMekV5THpJd01qSmZNRFJmTVRaZkxWOU5RVkJmVjJWemRGOUhaWEp0WVc1cFkxOGxSVElsT0RBbE9UTmZZMk11WHpVNE1GOURSVjh0WDBWT1JDNXdibWN2TWpBd2NIZ3RNakF5TWw4d05GOHhObDh0WDAxQlVGOVhaWE4wWDBkbGNtMWhibWxqWHlWRk1pVTRNQ1U1TTE5all5NWZOVGd3WDBORlh5MWZSVTVFTG5CdVp3PT0ucG5n.png)
If indeed Proto-West Germanic existed, it must have been between the 2nd and 7th centuries. Until the late 2nd century AD, the language of runic inscriptions found in Scandinavia and in Northern Germany were so similar that Proto-North Germanic and the Western dialects in the south were still part of one language ("Proto-Northwest Germanic").
Sometime after that, the split into West and North Germanic occurred. By the 4th and 5th centuries the great migration set in. By the end of the 6th century, the area in which West Germanic languages were spoken, at least by the upper classes, had tripled compared to the year 400. This caused an increasing disintegration of the West Germanic language and finally the formation of the daughter languages.
It has been argued that, judging by their nearly identical syntax, the West Germanic dialects were closely enough related to have been mutually intelligible up to the 7th century. Over the course of this period, the dialects diverged successively. The High German consonant shift that occurred mostly during the 7th century AD in what is now southern Germany, Austria, and Switzerland can be considered the end of the linguistic unity among the West Germanic dialects, although its effects on their own should not be overestimated. Bordering dialects very probably continued to be mutually intelligible even beyond the boundaries of the consonant shift.
Middle Ages
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODRMemhrTDBocGMzUnZjbWxqWVd4ZlYyVnpkRjlIWlhKdFlXNXBZMTlzWVc1bmRXRm5aVjloY21WaExuQnVaeTh6TlRCd2VDMUlhWE4wYjNKcFkyRnNYMWRsYzNSZlIyVnliV0Z1YVdOZmJHRnVaM1ZoWjJWZllYSmxZUzV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
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.
The High German consonant shift distinguished the High German languages from the other West Germanic languages. By early modern times, the span had extended into considerable differences, ranging from Highest Alemannic in the South (the Walliser dialect being the southernmost surviving German dialect) to Northern Low Saxon in the North. Although both extremes are considered German, they are not mutually intelligible. The southernmost varieties have completed the second sound shift, whereas the northern dialects remained unaffected by the consonant shift.
Of modern German varieties, Low German is the one that most resembles modern English. The district of Angeln (or Anglia), from which the name English derives, is in the extreme northern part of Germany between the Danish border and the Baltic coast. The area of the Saxons (parts of today's Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony) lay south of Anglia. The Angles and Saxons, two Germanic tribes, in combination with a number of other peoples from northern Germany and the Jutland Peninsula, particularly the Jutes, settled in Britain following the end of Roman rule in the island. Once in Britain, these Germanic peoples eventually developed a shared cultural and linguistic identity as Anglo-Saxons; the extent of the linguistic influence of the native Romano-British population on the incomers is debatable.
![image](https://www.english.nina.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.png)
Family tree
This section needs additional citations for verification.(August 2023) |
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODNMemN4TDBWcGJuUmxhV3gxYm1kZlpHVnlYMGRsY20xaGJtVnVYMjVoWTJoZlRXRjFjbVZ5TG1WdUxuTjJaeTgyTVRCd2VDMUZhVzUwWldsc2RXNW5YMlJsY2w5SFpYSnRZVzVsYmw5dVlXTm9YMDFoZFhKbGNpNWxiaTV6ZG1jdWNHNW4ucG5n.png)
Divisions between subfamilies of continental Germanic languages are rarely precisely defined; most form dialect continua, with adjacent dialects being mutually intelligible and more separated ones not.
- West Germanic languages
- North Sea Germanic / Ingvaeonic languages
- Anglo-Frisian
- Anglic
- Frisian
- West Frisian
- Hindeloopen Frisian
- Schiermonnikoog Frisian
- Westlauwers–Terschellings
- Terschelling Frisian
- Mainland West Frisian
- Clay Frisian
- Wood Frisian
- Westereendersk
- East Frisian
- Ems
- Saterland Frisian
- Weser
- Wangerooge Frisian
- Wursten Frisian
- Ems
- North Frisian
- West Frisian
- Low German
- Northern Low Saxon
- Westphalian
- Eastphalian
- Marchian
- Mecklenburgisch-Vorpommersch
- Central Pomeranian
- East Pomeranian (moribund)
- Low Prussian (moribund)
- Dutch Low Saxon
- Anglo-Frisian
- Weser–Rhine Germanic / Istvaeonic languages
- Low Franconian
- Central German
- Central Franconian
- Ripuarian
- Luxembourgish
- Rhine Franconian, including the dialects of Hessen, Pennsylvania German, and most of those from Lorraine
- Pennsylvania Dutch
- Thuringian
- Upper Saxon German
- Schlesisch–Wilmesau
- Bielsko-Biała[citation needed]
- Halcnovian
- Wymysorys
- Silesian (moribund)
- Bielsko-Biała[citation needed]
- High Prussian (moribund)
- Central Franconian
- Elbe Germanic / Irminonic languages
- Upper German
- Alemannic, including Swiss German and Alsatian
- Swabian
- Bavarian
- East Franconian
- South Franconian
- Lombardic (extinct)
- Upper German
- Yiddish (a language based on Eastern-Central dialects of late Middle High German/Early New High German)
- North Sea Germanic / Ingvaeonic languages
Comparison of phonological and morphological features
This section does not cite any sources.(July 2019) |
The following table shows a list of various linguistic features and their extent among the West Germanic languages, organized roughly from northwest to southeast. Some may only appear in the older languages but are no longer apparent in the modern languages.
Old English | Old Frisian | Old Saxon | Old Dutch | Old Central German | Old Upper German | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Palatalisation of velars | Yes | Yes | Partial | No | No | No |
Unrounding of front rounded vowels | ø but not y | Yes | No | Southwestern | No | No |
Loss of intervocalic *-h- | Yes | Yes | Developing | Yes | Developing | No |
Class II weak verb ending *-(ō)ja- | Yes | Yes | Sometimes | No | No | No |
Merging of plural forms of verbs | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law | Yes | Yes | Yes | Rare | No | No |
Loss of the reflexive pronoun | Yes | Yes | Most dialects | Most dialects | No | No |
Loss of final *-z in single-syllable words | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Reduction of weak class III to four relics | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Monophthongization of *ai, *au | Yes | Yes | Yes | Usually | Partial | Partial |
Diphthongization of *ē, *ō | No | No | Rare | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Final-obstruent devoicing | No | No | No | Yes | Developing | No |
Loss of initial *h- before consonant | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Developing |
Loss of initial *w- before consonant | No | No | No | No | Most dialects | Yes |
High German consonant shift | No | No | No | No | Partial | Yes |
The following table shows some comparisons of consonant development in the respective dialect/language (online examples though) continuum, showing the gradually growing partake in the High German consonant shift and the anglofrisian palatalization. The table uses IPA, to avoid confusion via orthographical differences. The realisation of [r] will be ignored.
C = any consonant, A = back vowel, E = front vowel
Proto West Germanic | *θ- | *-ð- | *-β- | *-β | *g- | *-Aɣ- | *-Eɣ- | *-Ak- | *-Ak | *-Ek- | *-Ek | *d- | *-d- | *b- | *sA- | *sE- | *sk | *-t- | *-p- | *-tt- | *t- | *-pp- | *p- | *-kk- | *kA- | *kE- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PR-English | θ | ð | v | f | ɣ | j | k | t̠ʃ | d | b | s | ʃ | ʃ | t | p | t | p | p | k | k | t̠ʃ | |||||
Frisian | t | ɾ~d | k | sk | ||||||||||||||||||||||
South Low Franconian | d | d | ɣ | z | sx | k | ||||||||||||||||||||
North Low Franconian (Dutch) | x | x | ç | |||||||||||||||||||||||
West Low German | ʃ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
North/Central Low German | g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
East Low German | ʝ | ʃ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
West Central German | x | ç | x | ʃ | t | t͡s | ||||||||||||||||||||
Mid Central German | ɾ | b | ɣ | ʝ | ɣ | x | ʒ | ʃ | d | z | v | b | g | |||||||||||||
East Central German | d | b | g | x | ʃ | t | s | f | p | k | ||||||||||||||||
Upper German (only partly HG) | ç | p͡f | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
-> some southernmost dialects | k | x | p | s | k͡x |
Phonology
The existence of a unified Proto-West Germanic language is debated. Features which are common to West Germanic languages may be attributed either to common inheritance or to areal effects.
The phonological system of the West Germanic branching as reconstructed is mostly similar to that of Proto-Germanic, with some changes in the categorization and phonetic realization of some phonemes.
Consonants
In addition to the particular changes described above, some notable differences in the consonant system of West Germanic from Proto-Germanic are:
- Fortition of /ð/ to /d/ in all positions
- The transition of /z/ into a rhotic consonant (often transcribed as ʀ), which eventually merged with /r/
- A process referred to as West Germanic gemination, which is visible in the history of all West Germanic languages
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Labio-Velar | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | (ŋ) | (ŋʷ) | |||||||
Stop | p | b~v | t | d | k | g~ɣ | kʷ | gʷ~ɣʷ | |||
Fricative | f | θ | s | z | x | xʷ | |||||
Rhotic | r | ||||||||||
Approximant | l | j | w |
Vowels
Some notable differences in the vowel system of West Germanic from Proto-Germanic are:
- Reduction of overlong vowels to simple long vowels
- Lowering of /ɛː/ to /æː/
- The creation of a new short /o/ phoneme, from the lowering of /u/ in initial syllables before /a/, and the reduction of word-final /ɔː/
Front | Central | Back | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
unrounded | unrounded | rounded | ||||
short | long | short | long | short | long | |
Close | i | iː | u | uː | ||
Mid | e | eː | o | oː | ||
Open | æː | a | aː |
Morphology
Nouns
The noun paradigms of Proto-West Germanic have been reconstructed as follows:
Case | Nouns in -a- (m.) *dagă (day) | Nouns in -ja- *herjă (army) | Nouns in -ija- *hirdijă (herder) | Nouns in -a- (n.) *joką (yoke) | Nouns in -ō- *gebu (gift) | Nouns in -i- *gastĭ/*gasti (guest) | Nouns in -u- *sunu (son) | Nouns in -u- (n.) *fehu (cattle) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *dag/dagă | *dagō?/dagā | *herjă/*hari | *herjā/*harjō? | *hirdijă | *hirdijō | *joką | *joku | *gebu | *gebā/*gebō | *gastĭ/*gasti | *gastī | *sunu | *sunī<*suniwi/*suniwi, -ō | *fehu | (?) |
Vocative | *dag(ă) | *herjă/*hari | *hirdī | |||||||||||||
Accusative | *dag/dagă | *dagą̄?/dagą | *herjă/*hari | *herją/*harją̄? | *hirdiją | *hirdiją̄ | *geba/*gebā | *gebā | *gastĭ/*gasti | *gasti/*gastį̄ | *sunu | *sunu < *sunų / *sunų̄? | ||||
Genitive | *dagas | *dagō | *herjes/*harjas | *herjō/*harjō | *hirdijas | *hirdijō | *jokas | *jokō | *gebā | *gebō(nō)/*gebō | *gastes/*gastī | *gastijō | *sunō | *suniwō | *fehō | |
Dative | *dagē | *dagum | *herjē/*harjē | *herjum/*harjum | *hirdijē | *hirdijum | *jokē | *jokum | *gebu/*gebē | *gebōm | *gastē/*gastī | *gastim | *suniu < *suniwi / *suniwi, -ō | *sunum | *fehiwi, -ō | |
Instrumental | *dagu | *herju/*harju | *hirdiju | *joku | *gebu | *sunu < *sunū / *sunu | *fehu |
West Germanic vocabulary
The following table compares a number of Frisian, English, Scots, Yola, Dutch, Limburgish, German and Afrikaans words with common West Germanic (or older) origin. The grammatical gender of each term is noted as masculine (m.), feminine (f.), or neuter (n.) where relevant.
West Frisian | English | Scots | Yola | Afrikaans | Dutch | Limburgish | Standard High German | Old English | Old High German | Proto-West Germanic | Proto-Germanic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
kaam | comb | kaim | khime / rack | kam | kam m. | kâmp | Kamm m. | camb m. | camb m. | kąbă [see inscription of Erfurt-Frienstedt], *kambă m. | *kambaz m. |
dei | day | day | dei | dag | dag m. | daag | Tag m. | dæġ m. | tag m. | *dagă m. | *dagaz m. |
rein | rain | rain | rhyne | reën | regen m. | rengel, raege | Regen m. | reġn m. | regan m. | *regnă m. | *regnaz m. |
wei | way | wey | wei / wye | weg | weg m. | weeg | Weg m. | weġ m. | weg m. | *wegă m. | *wegaz m. |
neil | nail | nail | niel | nael | nagel m. | nieëgel | Nagel m. | næġel m. | nagal m. | *naglă m. | *naglaz m. |
tsiis | cheese | cheese | cheese | kaas | kaas m. | kieës | Käse m. | ċēse, ċīese m. | chāsi, kāsi m. | *kāsī m. | *kāsijaz m. (late Proto-Germanic, from Latin cāseus) |
tsjerke | church | kirk | chourch | kerk | kerk f. | kêrk | Kirche f. | ċiriċe f. | chirihha, *kirihha f. | *kirikā f. | *kirikǭ f. (from Ancient Greek kuriakón "belonging to the lord") |
sibbe | sib; sibling | sib | sibbe (dated) / meany | – | sibbe f. | – | Sippe f. | sibb f. "kinship, peace" | sippa f. [cp. Old Saxon: sibbia] | sibbju, sibbjā f. | *sibjō f. "relationship, kinship, friendship" |
kaai f. | key | key | kei / kie | sleutel | sleutel m. | slueëtel | Schlüssel m. | cǣġ(e), cǣga f. "key, solution, experiment" | sluzzil m. | *slutilă m., *kēgă f. | *slutilaz m. "key"; *kēgaz, *kēguz f. "stake, post, pole" |
ha west | have been | hae(s)/hiv been | ha bin | was gewees | ben geweest | bin geweis(t) | bin gewesen | ||||
twa skiep | two sheep | twa sheep | twye zheep | twee skape | twee schapen n. | twieë schäöp | zwei Schafe n. | twā sċēap n. | zwei scāfa n. | *twai skēpu n. | *twai(?) skēpō n. |
hawwe | have | hae | ha | het | hebben | hebbe, höbbe | haben | habban, hafian | habēn | *habbjană | *habjaną |
ús | us | us | ouse | ons | ons | os | uns | ūs | uns | *uns | *uns |
brea | bread | breid | breed | brood | brood n. | mik, broeëd | Brot n. | brēad n. "fragment, bit, morsel, crumb" also "bread" | brōt n. | *braudă m. | *braudą n. "cooked food, leavened bread" |
hier | hair | hair | haar | haar | haar n. | haor | Haar n. | hēr, hǣr n. | hār n. | *hǣră n. | *hērą n. |
ear | ear | lug | lug | oor | oor n. | oeër | Ohr n. | ēare n. < pre-English *ǣora | ōra n. | *aura < *auza n. | *auzǭ, *ausōn n. |
doar | door | door | dher | deur | deur f. | dueër | Tür f. | duru f. | turi f. | *duru f. | *durz f. |
grien | green | green | green | groen | groen | greun | grün | grēne | gruoni | *grōnĭ | *grōniz |
swiet | sweet | sweet | sweet | soet | zoet | zeut | süß | swēte | s(w)uozi (< *swōti) | *swōtŭ | *swōtuz |
troch | through | throu | draugh | deur | door | doeër | durch | þurh | duruh | *þurhw | |
wiet | wet | weet | weate | nat | nat | naat | nass (traditional spelling: naß) | wǣt | naz (< *nat) | *wǣtă / *nată | *wētaz / *nataz |
each | eye | ee | ei / iee | oog | oog n. | oug | Auge n. | ēage n. < pre-English *ǣoga | ouga n. | *auga n. | *augō n. |
dream | dream | dream | dreem | droom | droom m. | draum | Traum m. | drēam m. "joy, pleasure, ecstasy, music, song" | troum m. | *draumă m. | *draumaz (< *draugmaz) m. |
stien | stone | stane | sthoan | steen | steen m. | stein | Stein m. | stān m. | stein m. | *staină m. | *stainaz m. |
bed | bed | bed | bed | bed | bed n. | bed | Bett n. | bedd n. | betti n. | *baddjă n. | *badją n. |
Other words, with a variety of origins:
West Frisian | English | Scots | Afrikaans | Dutch | Limburgish | Standard High German | Old English | Old High German | Proto-West Germanic | Proto-Germanic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
tegearre | together | thegither | saam tesame | samen tezamen | same | zusammen | tōgædere samen tōsamne | saman zisamane | *tōgadura, *tegadura / *tesamane | *tōgadur *samana |
hynder | horse | pony | perd | paard n. ros n. (dated) | perd ros | Pferd n. / Ross n. (traditional spelling: Roß) | hors n. eoh m. | (h)ros n. / pfarifrit n. / ehu- (in compositions) | *hrussă n. / *ehu m. | *hrussą n., *ehwaz m. |
Note that some of the shown similarities of Frisian and English vis-à-vis Dutch and German are secondary and not due to a closer relationship between them. For example, the plural of the word for "sheep" was originally unchanged in all four languages and still is in some Dutch dialects and a great deal of German dialects. Many other similarities, however, are indeed old inheritances.
Notes
- However, see Cercignani, Fausto, Indo-European ē in Germanic, in «Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung», 86/1, 1972, pp. 104–110.
- Graeme Davis (2006:154) notes "the languages of the Germanic group in the Old period are much closer than has previously been noted. Indeed it would not be inappropriate to regard them as dialects of one language. They are undoubtedly far closer one to another than are the various dialects of modern Chinese, for example. A reasonable modern analogy might be Arabic, where considerable dialectical diversity exists but within the concept of a single Arabic language." In: Davis, Graeme (2006). Comparative Syntax of Old English and Old Icelandic: Linguistic, Literary and Historical Implications. Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 3-03910-270-2.
- Original meaning "relative" has become "brother or sister" in English.
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Further reading
- Ringe, Donald R. (2012). Probert, Philomen; Willi, Andreas (eds.). "Cladistic principles and linguistic reality: the case of West Germanic". Laws and Rules on Indo-European. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 33–42. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199609925.003.0003. ISBN 9780191741579.
External links
This article has an unclear citation style The reason given is article uses predominantly short citations but also some full ones Use short citations consistently e g using sfnp The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting December 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The West Germanic languages constitute the largest of the three branches of the Germanic family of languages the others being the North Germanic and the extinct East Germanic languages The West Germanic branch is classically subdivided into three branches Ingvaeonic which includes English the Low German languages and the Frisian languages Istvaeonic which encompasses Dutch and its close relatives and Irminonic which includes German and its close relatives and variants West GermanicGeographic distributionOriginally between the Rhine Alps Elbe and North Sea today worldwideNative speakersc 490 millionLinguistic classificationIndo EuropeanGermanicWest GermanicSubdivisionsNorth Sea Germanic Anglo Frisian Low German Weser Rhine Germanic Low Franconian Elbe Germanic High GermanLanguage codesISO 639 5 a href https iso639 3 sil org code gmw class extiw title iso639 3 gmw gmw a ISO 639 3 Linguasphere52 AB amp 52 ACGlottologwest2793Extent of Germanic languages in present day Europe North Germanic languages Icelandic Faroese Norwegian Swedish Danish West Germanic languages Scots English West North and Saterland Frisian Dutch Low German High German Dots indicate areas where multilingualism is common English is by far the most spoken West Germanic language with more than 1 billion speakers worldwide Within Europe the three most prevalent West Germanic languages are English German and Dutch Frisian spoken by about 450 000 people constitutes a fourth distinct variety of West Germanic The language family also includes Afrikaans Yiddish Low Saxon Luxembourgish Hunsrik and Scots Additionally several creoles patois and pidgins are based on Dutch English or German HistoryOrigins and characteristics The Germanic languages are traditionally divided into three groups West East and North Germanic In some cases their exact relation was difficult to determine from the sparse evidence of runic inscriptions so that some individual varieties have been difficult to classify This is especially true for the unattested Jutish language today most scholars classify Jutish as a West Germanic variety with several features of North Germanic Until the late 20th century some scholars claimed that all Germanic languages remained mutually intelligible throughout the Migration Period while others hold that speakers of West Germanic dialects like Old Frankish and speakers of Gothic were already unable to communicate fluently by around the 3rd century AD As a result of the substantial progress in the study of Proto West Germanic in the early 21st century there is a growing consensus that East and West Germanic indeed would have been mutually unintelligible at that time whereas West and North Germanic remained partially intelligible Dialects with the features assigned to the western group formed from Proto Germanic in the late Jastorf culture c 1st century BC The West Germanic group is characterized by a number of phonological morphological and lexical innovations or archaisms not found in North and East Germanic Examples of West Germanic phonological particularities are page needed The delabialization of all labiovelar consonants except word initially Change of zw and đw to ww e g izwiz gt iwwiz you dat pl feđwōr gt fewwōr four d the fricative allophone of d becomes d in all positions The two other fricatives b and ɣ are retained This must have occurred after zw and đw have become ww Replacement of the second person singular preterite ending t with i indicative and subjunctive mood For more than 150 years there has been a scientific debate on the best explanation of these difficult forms Today some linguists beginning with J v Fierlinger in 1885 and followed by R Lowe 1907 O Behaghel 1922 Jakob Sverdrup 1927 Hermann Hirt 1932 E Polome 1964 W Meid 1971 E Hill 2004 K H Mottausch and W Euler 1992ff explain this ending as a relic of the Indo European aorist tense Under this assumption the ending t would have replaced older i z Sceptical about this explanation and mostly explaining these forms as influenced by optative forms are W Scherer 1868 before 1917 Edward Schroder 1921 Bammesberger 1986 and Don Ringe 2014 Loss of word final z Only Old High German preserves it at all as r and only in single syllable words Following the later loss of word final a and aN this made the nominative and accusative of many nouns identical Loss of final a including from PGmc an in polysyllables e g acc sg OHG horn vs ORu horna horn this change must have occurred after the loss of word final z West Germanic gemination lengthening of all consonants except r before j this change must have occurred after the loss of final a Change of Proto Germanic e to i before i and j A relative chronology of about 20 sound changes from Proto Northwest Germanic to Proto West Germanic some of them only regional was published by Don Ringe in 2014 A phonological archaism of West Germanic is the preservation of grammatischer Wechsel in most verbs particularly in Old High German This implies the same for West Germanic whereas in East and North Germanic many of these alternations in Gothic almost all of them had been levelled out analogically by the time of the earliest texts A common morphological innovation of the West Germanic languages is the development of a gerund Common morphological archaisms of West Germanic include The preservation of an instrumental case the preservation of the athematic verbs e g Anglo Saxon dō m Old Saxon dōm OHG tōm I do the preservation of some traces which of the aorist in Old English and Old High German but neither in Gothic nor in North Germanic Furthermore the West Germanic languages share many lexemes not existing in North Germanic and or East Germanic archaisms as well as common neologisms Some lexemes have specific meanings in West Germanic and there are specific innovations in word formation and derivational morphology for example neologisms ending with modern English ship lt wgerm skapi cf German schaft like friendship lt wg friund a skapi cf German Freundschaft are specific to the West Germanic languages and are thus seen as a Proto West Germanic innovation Validity of West Germanic as a subgroup Since at least the early 20th century a number of morphological phonological and lexical archaisms and innovations have been identified as specifically West Germanic Since then individual Proto West Germanic lexemes have also been reconstructed Yet there was a long dispute if these West Germanic characteristics had to be explained with the existence of a West Germanic proto language or rather with Sprachbund effects Hans Frede Nielsen s 1981 study Old English and the Continental Germanic Languages made the conviction grow that a West Germanic proto language did exist But up until the 1990s some scholars doubted that there was once a Proto West Germanic proto language which was ancestral only to later West Germanic languages In 2002 Gert Klingenschmitt presented a series of pioneering reconstructions of Proto West Germanic morphological paradigmas and new views on some early West Germanic phonological changes and in 2013 the first monographic analysis and description of Proto West Germanic was published second edition 2022 Today there is a scientific consensus on what Don Ringe stated in 2012 that these phonological and morphological changes amount to a massive evidence for a valid West Germanic clade After East Germanic broke off an event usually dated to the 2nd or 1st century BC the remaining Germanic languages the Northwest Germanic languages divided into four main dialects obsolete source North Germanic and the three groups conventionally called West Germanic namely Northwest Germanic North Sea Germanic ancestral to Anglo Frisian and Old Saxon Weser Rhine Germanic ancestral to Old Dutch and present as a substrate or superstrate in some of the Central Franconian and Rhine Franconian dialects of Old High German Elbe Germanic ancestral to the Upper German and most Central German dialects of Old High German and the extinct Langobardic language Although there is quite a bit of knowledge about North Sea Germanic or Anglo Frisian because of the characteristic features of its daughter languages Anglo Saxon Old English and Old Frisian linguists know almost nothing about Weser Rhine Germanic and Elbe Germanic In fact both terms were coined in the 1940s to refer to groups of archaeological findings rather than linguistic features Only later were the terms applied to hypothetical dialectal differences within both regions Even today the very small number of Migration Period runic inscriptions from the area many of them illegible unclear or consisting only of one word often a name is insufficient to identify linguistic features specific to the two supposed dialect groups Evidence that East Germanic split off before the split between North and West Germanic comes from a number of linguistic innovations common to North and West Germanic page needed including The lowering of Proto Germanic e ɛː also written ǣ to a The development of umlaut The rhotacism of z to r The development of the demonstrative pronoun ancestral to English this Under that view the properties that the West Germanic languages have in common separate from the North Germanic languages are not necessarily inherited from a Proto West Germanic language but may have spread by language contact among the Germanic languages spoken in Central Europe not reaching those spoken in Scandinavia or reaching them much later Rhotacism for example was largely complete in West Germanic while North Germanic runic inscriptions still clearly distinguished the two phonemes There is also evidence that the lowering of e to a occurred first in West Germanic and spread to North Germanic later since word final e was lowered before it was shortened in West Germanic but in North Germanic the shortening occurred first resulting in e that later merged with i However there are also a number of common archaisms in West Germanic shared by neither Old Norse nor Gothic Some authors who support the concept of a West Germanic proto language claim that not only shared innovations can require the existence of a linguistic clade but also that there are archaisms that cannot be explained simply as retentions later lost in the North or East because this assumption can produce contradictions with attested features of the other branches clarification needed The debate on the existence of a Proto West Germanic clade was summarized 2006 That North Germanic is a unitary subgroup of Proto Germanic is completely obvious as all of its dialects shared a long series of innovations some of them very striking That the same is true of West Germanic has been denied but I will argue in vol ii that all the West Germanic languages share several highly unusual innovations that virtually force us to posit a West Germanic clade On the other hand the internal subgrouping of both North Germanic and West Germanic is very messy and it seems clear that each of those subfamilies diversified into a network of dialects that remained in contact for a considerable period of time in some cases right up to the present The reconstruction of Proto West Germanic Several scholars have published reconstructions of Proto West Germanic morphological paradigms and many authors have reconstructed individual Proto West Germanic morphological forms or lexemes The first comprehensive reconstruction of the Proto West Germanic language was published in 2013 by Wolfram Euler followed in 2014 by the study of Donald Ringe and Ann Taylor Dating Early West Germanic West Germanic languages c 580 Euler 2022 If indeed Proto West Germanic existed it must have been between the 2nd and 7th centuries Until the late 2nd century AD the language of runic inscriptions found in Scandinavia and in Northern Germany were so similar that Proto North Germanic and the Western dialects in the south were still part of one language Proto Northwest Germanic Sometime after that the split into West and North Germanic occurred By the 4th and 5th centuries the great migration set in By the end of the 6th century the area in which West Germanic languages were spoken at least by the upper classes had tripled compared to the year 400 This caused an increasing disintegration of the West Germanic language and finally the formation of the daughter languages It has been argued that judging by their nearly identical syntax the West Germanic dialects were closely enough related to have been mutually intelligible up to the 7th century Over the course of this period the dialects diverged successively The High German consonant shift that occurred mostly during the 7th century AD in what is now southern Germany Austria and Switzerland can be considered the end of the linguistic unity among the West Germanic dialects although its effects on their own should not be overestimated Bordering dialects very probably continued to be mutually intelligible even beyond the boundaries of the consonant shift Middle Ages The approximate extent of the continental West Germanic languages in the early 10th century Old Dutch Old High German Old Frisian 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 The High German consonant shift distinguished the High German languages from the other West Germanic languages By early modern times the span had extended into considerable differences ranging from Highest Alemannic in the South the Walliser dialect being the southernmost surviving German dialect to Northern Low Saxon in the North Although both extremes are considered German they are not mutually intelligible The southernmost varieties have completed the second sound shift whereas the northern dialects remained unaffected by the consonant shift Of modern German varieties Low German is the one that most resembles modern English The district of Angeln or Anglia from which the name English derives is in the extreme northern part of Germany between the Danish border and the Baltic coast The area of the Saxons parts of today s Schleswig Holstein and Lower Saxony lay south of Anglia The Angles and Saxons two Germanic tribes in combination with a number of other peoples from northern Germany and the Jutland Peninsula particularly the Jutes settled in Britain following the end of Roman rule in the island Once in Britain these Germanic peoples eventually developed a shared cultural and linguistic identity as Anglo Saxons the extent of the linguistic influence of the native Romano British population on the incomers is debatable The varieties of the continental West Germanic dialect continuum since 1945 Low Franconian or Netherlandic Frisian Low Saxon or Low German Central German Upper GermanFamily treeThis section needs additional citations for verification Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Grouping of the main Germanic tribes which can be equated with their languages dialects according to Friedrich Maurer Divisions between subfamilies of continental Germanic languages are rarely precisely defined most form dialect continua with adjacent dialects being mutually intelligible and more separated ones not West Germanic languages North Sea Germanic Ingvaeonic languages Anglo Frisian Anglic English Irish Middle English Hiberno Norman Irish Anglo NormanFingalian extinct Yola extinct Scots Frisian West Frisian Hindeloopen Frisian Schiermonnikoog Frisian Westlauwers Terschellings Terschelling Frisian Mainland West Frisian Clay Frisian Wood Frisian Westereendersk East Frisian Ems Saterland Frisian Weser Wangerooge Frisian Wursten Frisian North Frisian Low German Northern Low Saxon Westphalian Eastphalian Marchian Mecklenburgisch Vorpommersch Central Pomeranian East Pomeranian moribund Low Prussian moribund Dutch Low Saxon Weser Rhine Germanic Istvaeonic languages Low Franconian Dutch West Flemish East Flemish Zeelandic Central Dutch Hollandic Afrikaans Arabic Afrikaans Kaaps Kleverlandish Brabantian Limburgish Central German Central Franconian Ripuarian Luxembourgish Rhine Franconian including the dialects of Hessen Pennsylvania German and most of those from Lorraine Pennsylvania Dutch Thuringian Upper Saxon German Schlesisch Wilmesau Bielsko Biala citation needed Halcnovian Wymysorys Silesian moribund High Prussian moribund Elbe Germanic Irminonic languages Upper German Alemannic including Swiss German and Alsatian Swabian Bavarian East Franconian South Franconian Lombardic extinct Yiddish a language based on Eastern Central dialects of late Middle High German Early New High German Comparison of phonological and morphological featuresThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The following table shows a list of various linguistic features and their extent among the West Germanic languages organized roughly from northwest to southeast Some may only appear in the older languages but are no longer apparent in the modern languages Old English Old Frisian Old Saxon Old Dutch Old Central German Old Upper GermanPalatalisation of velars Yes Yes Partial No No NoUnrounding of front rounded vowels o but not y Yes No Southwestern No NoLoss of intervocalic h Yes Yes Developing Yes Developing NoClass II weak verb ending ō ja Yes Yes Sometimes No No NoMerging of plural forms of verbs Yes Yes Yes No No NoIngvaeonic nasal spirant law Yes Yes Yes Rare No NoLoss of the reflexive pronoun Yes Yes Most dialects Most dialects No NoLoss of final z in single syllable words Yes Yes Yes Yes No NoReduction of weak class III to four relics Yes Yes Yes Yes No NoMonophthongization of ai au Yes Yes Yes Usually Partial PartialDiphthongization of e ō No No Rare Yes Yes YesFinal obstruent devoicing No No No Yes Developing NoLoss of initial h before consonant No No No Yes Yes DevelopingLoss of initial w before consonant No No No No Most dialects YesHigh German consonant shift No No No No Partial Yes The following table shows some comparisons of consonant development in the respective dialect language online examples though continuum showing the gradually growing partake in the High German consonant shift and the anglofrisian palatalization The table uses IPA to avoid confusion via orthographical differences The realisation of r will be ignored C any consonant A back vowel E front vowel Proto West Germanic 8 d b b g Aɣ Eɣ Ak Ak Ek Ek d d b sA sE sk t p tt t pp p kk kA kE PR English 8 d v f ɣ j k t ʃ d b s ʃ ʃ t p t p p k k t ʃFrisian t ɾ d k skSouth Low Franconian d d ɣ z sx kNorth Low Franconian Dutch x x cWest Low German ʃNorth Central Low German gEast Low German ʝ ʃWest Central German x c x ʃ t t sMid Central German ɾ b ɣ ʝ ɣ x ʒ ʃ d z v b gEast Central German d b g x ʃ t s f p kUpper German only partly HG c p f gt some southernmost dialects k x p s k xPhonologyThe existence of a unified Proto West Germanic language is debated Features which are common to West Germanic languages may be attributed either to common inheritance or to areal effects The phonological system of the West Germanic branching as reconstructed is mostly similar to that of Proto Germanic with some changes in the categorization and phonetic realization of some phonemes Consonants In addition to the particular changes described above some notable differences in the consonant system of West Germanic from Proto Germanic are Fortition of d to d in all positions The transition of z into a rhotic consonant often transcribed as ʀ which eventually merged with r A process referred to as West Germanic gemination which is visible in the history of all West Germanic languagesConsonant phonemes of West Germanic Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Labio VelarNasal m n ŋ ŋʷ Stop p b v t d k g ɣ kʷ gʷ ɣʷFricative f 8 s z x xʷRhotic rApproximant l j wVowels Some notable differences in the vowel system of West Germanic from Proto Germanic are Reduction of overlong vowels to simple long vowels Lowering of ɛː to aeː The creation of a new short o phoneme from the lowering of u in initial syllables before a and the reduction of word final ɔː Monophthong phonemes of West Germanic Front Central Backunrounded unrounded roundedshort long short long short longClose i iː u uːMid e eː o oːOpen aeː a aːMorphologyNouns The noun paradigms of Proto West Germanic have been reconstructed as follows Case Nouns in a m dagă day Nouns in ja herjă army Nouns in ija hirdijă herder Nouns in a n joka yoke Nouns in ō gebu gift Nouns in i gastĭ gasti guest Nouns in u sunu son Nouns in u n fehu cattle Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular PluralNominative dag dagă dagō daga herjă hari herja harjō hirdijă hirdijō joka joku gebu geba gebō gastĭ gasti gasti sunu suni lt suniwi suniwi ō fehu Vocative dag ă herjă hari hirdiAccusative dag dagă daga daga herjă hari herja harja hirdija hirdija geba geba geba gastĭ gasti gasti gastį sunu sunu lt sunu sunu Genitive dagas dagō herjes harjas herjō harjō hirdijas hirdijō jokas jokō geba gebō nō gebō gastes gasti gastijō sunō suniwō fehōDative dage dagum herje harje herjum harjum hirdije hirdijum joke jokum gebu gebe gebōm gaste gasti gastim suniu lt suniwi suniwi ō sunum fehiwi ōInstrumental dagu herju harju hirdiju joku gebu sunu lt sunu sunu fehuWest Germanic vocabularyThe following table compares a number of Frisian English Scots Yola Dutch Limburgish German and Afrikaans words with common West Germanic or older origin The grammatical gender of each term is noted as masculine m feminine f or neuter n where relevant West Frisian English Scots Yola Afrikaans Dutch Limburgish Standard High German Old English Old High German Proto West Germanic Proto Germanickaam comb kaim khime rack kam kam m kamp Kamm m camb m camb m kabă see inscription of Erfurt Frienstedt kambă m kambaz m dei day day dei dag dag m daag Tag m daeġ m tag m dagă m dagaz m rein rain rain rhyne reen regen m rengel raege Regen m reġn m regan m regnă m regnaz m wei way wey wei wye weg weg m weeg Weg m weġ m weg m wegă m wegaz m neil nail nail niel nael nagel m nieegel Nagel m naeġel m nagal m naglă m naglaz m tsiis cheese cheese cheese kaas kaas m kiees Kase m ċese ċiese m chasi kasi m kasi m kasijaz m late Proto Germanic from Latin caseus tsjerke church kirk chourch kerk kerk f kerk Kirche f ċiriċe f chirihha kirihha f kirika f kirikǭ f from Ancient Greek kuriakon belonging to the lord sibbe sib sibling sib sibbe dated meany sibbe f Sippe f sibb f kinship peace sippa f cp Old Saxon sibbia sibbju sibbja f sibjō f relationship kinship friendship kaai f key key kei kie sleutel sleutel m slueetel Schlussel m cǣġ e cǣga f key solution experiment sluzzil m slutilă m kegă f slutilaz m key kegaz keguz f stake post pole ha west have been hae s hiv been ha bin was gewees ben geweest bin geweis t bin gewesentwa skiep two sheep twa sheep twye zheep twee skape twee schapen n twiee schaop zwei Schafe n twa sċeap n zwei scafa n twai skepu n twai skepō n hawwe have hae ha het hebben hebbe hobbe haben habban hafian haben habbjană habjanaus us us ouse ons ons os uns us uns uns unsbrea bread breid breed brood brood n mik broeed Brot n bread n fragment bit morsel crumb also bread brōt n braudă m brauda n cooked food leavened bread hier hair hair haar haar haar n haor Haar n her hǣr n har n hǣră n hera n ear ear lug lug oor oor n oeer Ohr n eare n lt pre English ǣora ōra n aura lt auza n auzǭ ausōn n doar door door dher deur deur f dueer Tur f duru f turi f duru f durz f grien green green green groen groen greun grun grene gruoni grōnĭ grōnizswiet sweet sweet sweet soet zoet zeut suss swete s w uozi lt swōti swōtŭ swōtuztroch through throu draugh deur door doeer durch thurh duruh thurhwwiet wet weet weate nat nat naat nass traditional spelling nass wǣt naz lt nat wǣtă nată wetaz natazeach eye ee ei iee oog oog n oug Auge n eage n lt pre English ǣoga ouga n auga n augō n dream dream dream dreem droom droom m draum Traum m dream m joy pleasure ecstasy music song troum m draumă m draumaz lt draugmaz m stien stone stane sthoan steen steen m stein Stein m stan m stein m staină m stainaz m bed bed bed bed bed bed n bed Bett n bedd n betti n baddjă n badja n Other words with a variety of origins West Frisian English Scots Afrikaans Dutch Limburgish Standard High German Old English Old High German Proto West Germanic Proto Germanictegearre together thegither saam tesame samen tezamen same zusammen tōgaedere samen tōsamne saman zisamane tōgadura tegadura tesamane tōgadur samanahynder horse pony perd paard n ros n dated perd ros Pferd n Ross n traditional spelling Ross hors n eoh m h ros n pfarifrit n ehu in compositions hrussă n ehu m hrussa n ehwaz m Note that some of the shown similarities of Frisian and English vis a vis Dutch and German are secondary and not due to a closer relationship between them For example the plural of the word for sheep was originally unchanged in all four languages and still is in some Dutch dialects and a great deal of German dialects Many other similarities however are indeed old inheritances NotesHowever see Cercignani Fausto Indo European e in Germanic in Zeitschrift fur vergleichende Sprachforschung 86 1 1972 pp 104 110 Graeme Davis 2006 154 notes the languages of the Germanic group in the Old period are much closer than has previously been noted Indeed it would not be inappropriate to regard them as dialects of one language They are undoubtedly far closer one to another than are the various dialects of modern Chinese for example A reasonable modern analogy might be Arabic where considerable dialectical diversity exists but within the concept of a single Arabic language In Davis Graeme 2006 Comparative Syntax of Old English and Old Icelandic Linguistic Literary and Historical Implications Bern Peter Lang ISBN 3 03910 270 2 Original meaning relative has become brother or sister in English ReferencesVasagar Jeevan 18 June 2013 German should be a working language of EU says Merkel s party Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 via The Telegraph Nederlands wereldtaal Nederlandse Taalunie 2010 Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2011 Afrikaans Worldwide distribution Worlddata info October 2023 April 2015 Archived from the original on 3 April 2024 Retrieved 3 April 2024 Hawkins John A 1987 Germanic languages In Bernard Comrie ed The World s Major Languages Oxford University Press pp 68 76 ISBN 0 19 520521 9 Euler 2022 p 25 26 Seebold 1998 p 13 Euler 2022 pp 238 243 Euler 2022 p 243 Robinson 1992 Euler 2013 p 53 Euler 2022 p 61 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 p 104 Stiles 1985 p 91 94 with references Ringe amp Taylor 2014 pp 73 104 P Stiles 2013 p 15 Euler 2022 p 71f v Fierlinger 1885 p 432 446 Lowe R Kuhns Zeitschrift KZ vol 40 p 267 quoted from Hirt 1932 vol 2 p 152 Behaghel 1922 p 167 Hirt 1932 vol 2 p 152f Polome 1964 pp 870ff Meid 1971 p 13ff Hill 2004 p 281 286 Mottausch 2013 Euler 2022 p 153 154 Crist Sean An Analysis of z loss in West Germanic Linguistic Society of America Annual Meeting 2002 Euler 2013 p 53 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 p 43 Euler 2013 p 53 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 p 50 54 Euler 2013 p 54 Stiles 2013 p 24ff Euler 2013 p 49 Euler 2013 p 230 Euler 2013 p 61 133 171 174 Euler 2013 p 67 70 74 76 97 113 etc Euler 2013 p 168 178 Euler 2013 p 170 173 Meid Wolfgang 1971 Das germanische Prateritum Innsbruck Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft p 13 Euler Wolfram Badenheuer Konrad 2009 Sprache und Herkunft der Germanen pp 168 171 London Berlin Inspiration Un Ltd Euler 2013 p 138 141 Euler 2022 p 196 211 Euler 2013 p 194 200 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 p 126 128 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 pp 128 129 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 pp 129 132 Ringe 2014 p 132 Euler 2022 p 222 Nielsen 1981 Robinson 1992 pp 17 18 Klingenschmitt 2002 p 169 189 Euler 2013 2022 Hartmann 2023 199 a West Germanic protolanguage is uncontroversial Ringe 2012b p 6 Kuhn Hans 1955 56 Zur Gliederung der germanischen Sprachen Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur 86 1 47 Ringe Don 2006 A Linguistic History of English Volume I From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic Oxford University Press p 213 214 H F Nielsen 1981 2001 G Klingenschmitt 2002 and K H Mottausch 1998 2011 Wolfram Euler Das Westgermanische von der Herausbildung im 3 bis zur Aufgliederung im 7 Jahrhundert Analyse und Rekonstruktion West Germanic From its Emergence in the 3rd Century to its Split in the 7th Century Analyses and Reconstruction 244 p in German with English summary London Berlin 2013 ISBN 978 3 9812110 7 8 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 Euler 2013 p 20 34 229 231 Map based on Meineke Eckhard amp Schwerdt Judith Einfuhrung in das Althochdeutsche Paderborn Zurich 2001 pp 209 W Heeringa Measuring Dialect Pronunciation Differences using Levenshtein Distance University of Groningen 2009 pp 232 234 Peter Wiesinger Die Einteilung der deutschen Dialekte In Werner Besch Ulrich Knoop Wolfgang Putschke Herbert Ernst Wiegand Hrsg Dialektologie Ein Handbuch zur deutschen und allgemeinen Dialektforschung 2 Halbband de Gruyter Berlin New York 1983 ISBN 3 11 009571 8 pp 807 900 Werner Konig dtv Atlas Deutsche Sprache 19 Auflage dtv Munchen 2019 ISBN 978 3 423 03025 0 pp 230 C Giesbers Dialecten op de grens van twee talen Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen 2008 pp 233 Hickey Raymond 2005 Dublin English Evolution and Change John Benjamins Publishing pp 196 198 ISBN 90 272 4895 8 Hickey Raymond 2002 A Source Book for Irish English John Benjamins Publishing pp 28 29 ISBN 9027237530 Hammarstrom Harald Forkel Robert Haspelmath Martin Bank Sebastian 10 July 2023 Glottolog 4 8 Irish Anglo Norman Glottolog Leipzig Germany Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology doi 10 5281 zenodo 8131084 Archived from the original on 17 July 2023 Retrieved 16 July 2023 Ringe amp Taylor 2014 pp 114 115 Euler 2022 pp 78 107 Euler 2022 p 85 Ringe 2014 p 115 Ringe 2014 p 114 Euler 2022 p 81 Euler 2022 p 78 Euler 2022 p 83 Euler 2022 p 88 sources Euler Wolfram 2013 passim SourcesAdamus Marian 1962 On the mutual relations between Nordic and other Germanic dialects Germanica Wratislavensia 7 115 158 Bammesberger Alfred 1984 Der indogermanische Aorist und das germanische Prateritum The Indo European aorist and the Germanic past tense in Languages and Cultures Studies in Honor of Edgar C Polome 791 pp Berlin de Gruyter Bammesberger Alfred Ed 1991 Old English Runes and their Continental Background Heidelberg Winter Bammesberger Alfred 1996 The Preterite of Germanic Strong Verbs in Classes Fore and Five in 27 33 43 Behaghel Otto 1922 Die 2 Pers Sg Inf st Flexion im Westgermanischen Indogermanische Forschungen in German 40 Berlin De Gruyter 167 168 doi 10 1515 if 1922 0117 Retrieved 29 December 2024 Bremmer Rolf H ed 1993 Current trends in West Germanic etymological lexicography proceedings of the Symposium held in Amsterdam 12 13 June 1989 Leiden Brill Bremmer Rolf H Jr 2009 An Introduction to Old Frisian History Grammar Reader Glossary Amsterdam Philadelphia Benjamins Publishing Company Euler Wolfram 2002 03 Vom Westgermanischen zum Althochdeutschen From West Germanic to Old High German Sprachaufgliederung im Dialektkontinuum in Klagenfurter Beitrage zur Sprachwissenschaft Vol 28 29 69 90 Euler Wolfram 2013 Das Westgermanische von der Herausbildung im 3 bis zur Aufgliederung im 7 Jahrhundert Analyse und Rekonstruktion 244 p in German with English summary Verlag Inspiration Un Limited London Berlin 2013 ISBN 978 3 9812110 7 8 Euler Wolfram 2022 Das Westgermanische von der Herausbildung im 3 bis zur Aufgliederung im 7 Jahrhundert Analyse und Rekonstruktion West Germanic from its Emergence in the 3rd up until its Dissolution in the 7th Century CE Analyses and Reconstruction in German 2nd ed Berlin Verlag Inspiration Unlimited ISBN 978 3 945127 414 v Fierlinger J 1885 Zur deutschen conjugation 1 Die II ps sg perf starker flexion im westgerm 2 Praesentia der wurzelclasse 3 Zur westgerm flexion des verb subst in Kuhns Zeitschrift KZ vol 27 p 430ff 1 Harke Heinrich 2011 Anglo Saxon Immigration and Ethnogenesis in Medieval Archaeology No 55 2011 pp 1 28 Hartmann Frederik Germanic Phylogeny Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics Oxford University Press 2023 ISBN 978 0 198 87273 3 Hill Eugen 2004 Das germanische Verb fur tun und die Ausgange des germanischen schwachen Prateritums in Sprachwissenschaft ISSN 0344 8169 Vol 29 no 3 p 257 304 Hilsberg Susan 2009 Place Names and Settlement History Aspects of Selected Topographical Elements on the Continent and in England Magister Theses Universitat Leipzig Hirt Hermann 1931 1932 1934 Handbuch des Urgermanischen Handbook of Proto Germanic 3 vols Heidelberg Winter Klein Thomas 2004 Im Vorfeld des Althochdeutschen und Altsachsischen Prior to Old High German and Old Saxon in Entstehung des Deutschen Heidelberg 241 270 Klingenschmitt Gert 2002 Zweck und Methode der sprachlichen Rekonstruktion in Peter Anreiter et al Name Sprache und Kulturen Festschrift Heinz Dieter Pohl Wien 453 474 Kortlandt Frederik 2008 Anglo Frisian in 54 55 265 278 Looijenga Jantina Helena 1997 Runes around the North Sea and on the Continent AD 150 700 Text amp Contents Groningen SSG Uitgeverij Friedrich Maurer 1942 Nordgermanen und Alemannen Studien zur germanischen und fruhdeutschen Sprachgeschichte Stammes und Volkskunde Strassburg Huneburg Mees Bernard 2002 The Bergakker inscription and the beginnings of Dutch in Amsterdamer Beitrage zur alteren Germanistik 56 23 26 1971 Das germanische Praeteritum Indogermanische Grundlagen und Entfaltung im Germanischen The Germanic Praeteritum Indo European foundations and development in Germanic 134pp Innsbrucker Beitrage zur Sprachwissenschaft 3 University Innsbruck Mottausch Karl Heinz 1998 Die reduplizierenden Verben im Nord und Westgermanischen Versuch eines Raum Zeit Modells in North Western European Language Evolution 33 43 91 Mottausch Karl Heinz 2011 Der Nominalakzent im Fruhurgermanischen Hamburg Kovac Mottausch Karl Heinz 2013 Untersuchungen zur Vorgeschichte des germanischen starken Verbs Die Rolle des Aorists 278p Hamburg Kovac Nielsen Hans F 1981 Old English and the Continental Germanic languages A Survey of Morphological and Phonological Interrelations Innsbruck Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft 2nd edition 1985 311p Innsbruck Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft Nielsen Hans Frede 2000 Ingwaonisch In Heinrich Beck et al eds Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde 2 Auflage Band 15 432 439 Berlin De Gruyter Page Raymond I 1999 An Introduction to English Runes 2 edition Woodbridge Bogdell Press Page Raymond I 2001 Frisian Runic Inscriptions in Horst Munske et al Handbuch des Friesischen Tubingen 523 530 Polome Edgar C 1964 Diachronic development of structural patterns in the Germanic conjugation system pp 870 880 in Lunt Horace G ed 1964 Proceedings of the Ninth International Congress of Linguists The Hague Ringe Donald R 2012 Cladistic Methodology and West Germanic Yale Linguistics Report Ringe Donald R Taylor Ann 2014 The Development of Old English A Linguistic History of English Vol 2 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199207848 Robinson Orrin W 1992 Old English and its closest Relatives A Survey of the earliest Germanic Languages Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 1454 1 LCCN 90024700 OCLC 1150958619 OL 1866584M Retrieved 29 December 2024 Seebold Elmar 1998 Die Sprache n der Germanen in der Zeit der Volkerwanderung The Language s of the Germanic Peoples during the Migration Period in E Koller amp H Laitenberger Suevos Schwaben Das Konigreich der Sueben auf der Iberischen Halbinsel 411 585 Tubingen 11 20 Seebold Elmar 2006 Westgermanische Sprachen West Germanic Languages in Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 33 530 536 Stifter David 2009 The Proto Germanic shift a gt ō and early Germanic linguistic contacts in Historische Sprachforschung 122 268 283 Stiles Patrick V 1985 1986 The fate of the numeral 4 in Germanic Nowele 6 pp 81 104 7 pp 3 27 8 pp 3 25 Stiles Patrick V 1995 Remarks on the Anglo Frisian thesis in Friesische Studien I Odense 177 220 Stiles Patrick V 2004 Place adverbs and the development of Proto Germanic long e1 in early West Germanic In Irma Hyvarinen et al Hg Etymologie Entlehnungen und Entwicklungen Memoires de la Soc Neophil de Helsinki 63 Helsinki 385 396 Stiles Patrick V 2013 The Pan West Germanic Isoglosses and the Subrelationships of West Germanic to Other Branches In Unity and Diversity in West Germanic I Special issue of 66 1 2013 Nielsen Hans Frede and Patrick V Stiles eds 5 ff 1974 West Germanic inflection derivation and compounding 240p The Hague Mouton Voyles Joseph B 1992 Early Germanic Grammar pre proto and post Germanic Language San Diego Academic PressFurther readingRinge Donald R 2012 Probert Philomen Willi Andreas eds Cladistic principles and linguistic reality the case of West Germanic Laws and Rules on Indo European Oxford Oxford University Press 33 42 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199609925 003 0003 ISBN 9780191741579 External linksWest Germanic languages at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from WiktionaryMedia from CommonsTexts from WikisourceResources from WikiversityData from Wikidata