Highest Alemannic German

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Highest Alemannic German
Spoken in: the Alps
Total speakers: about 500,000
Language family: Indo-European
 Germanic
  West Germanic
   High German
    Upper German
     Alemannic German
      Highest Alemannic German
Language codes
ISO 639-1: -
ISO 639-2: gsw
ISO 639-3: either:
gsw – Swiss German
wae – Walser German 
Areas where Highest Alemannic dialects are spoken are marked  in red.

 

Highest Alemannic is a branch of Alemannic dialects and belongs to the German language, even though mutual intelligibility with Standard German and other non-Alemannic German dialects is very limited.

Highest Alemannic dialects are spoken in alpine regions of Switzerland: In the Bernese Oberland, in the German-speaking parts of the Canton of Fribourg, in the Valais (see Walliser German), in the german speaking parts of Grisons, and in the Walser settlements (mostly in Switzerland but also in Italy and in Austria; see Walser German). In the West, the South and the South-East, they are surrounded by Romance languages; in the North, by High Alemannic dialects.

[edit] Features

The distinctive feature of the Highest Alemannic dialects is the lack of hiatus diphthongization, for instance [ˈʃniː.ə(n)] 'to snow', [ˈb̥uː.ə(n)] 'to build' vs. High Alemannic [ˈʃnei̯jə], [ˈb̥ou̯wə].

Many High Alemannic dialects have different verbal plural endings for all three persons, for instance wir singe(n) 'we sing', ir singet 'you (plural) sing', si singent 'they sing'. Almost all other German dialects use the same ending for the first and third persons in the plural.

There are High Alemannic dialects that have preserved the ending -n which has been dropped in most Upper German dialects.

The Highest Alemannic dialects are considered to be the most conservative dialects of German. The dialect of the Lötschental, for instance, preserved the three distinct classes of weak verbs (like in Old High German) until the beginning of the 20th century.

[edit] External links