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Bremian dialect
Low German dialect From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Bremian dialect (Low German: Bremer Platt) is the dialect of Low German spoken in the city of Bremen. It comes from the Oldenburgisch dialect.
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Classification
Bremian is classified as a Northern Low Saxon dialect since it derives from the Oldenburgisch dialects.[1] This means that it comes from West Low German.[2] Bremian also shares the most mutual intelligibility with the Northern Oldenburgisch dialect.[3]
It also means that Bremian's "sister dialects" are the aforementioned Northern Oldenburgisch dialect, which is spoken in the former County of Oldenburg, and is a more pure dialect[4] and Jeverland Oldenburgisch, spoken in the Jeverland area of East Frisia, which has influences from East Frisian Low Saxon.[5]
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Phonology and orthography
For Bremen, Heymann postulates the following phoneme inventory:
- Short vowels: a /a/, i /ɪ/, u /ʊ/, e /ə/, e /ɛ/, o /ɔ/[6] and their umlauts ö /œ/ and ü /ʏ/, the former being rare and the latter tending towards i /ɪ/[6]
- Long vowels: aa (ah,a) /ɔ:/, ie (i) /i:/, uu (uh, u) /u:/, oo (oh, o) /o:/, ee (eh, e) /e:/, e (ä) /ɛ:/[7] and their umlauts ö /œ:/ (umlaut to aa /ɔ:/, jyounger ä /æ:/~/ɛ:/), öö (öh,ö) (umlaut to aa /o:/, younger ee /e:/), üü (üh, ü, umlaut to younger /u:/) /y:/. Here too, Bremen tends to eliminate the umlaut.[8]
- Diphthongs: ei /aɪ̯/ (partly from older eu (oi) /ɔɪ̯/), au /aʊ̯/[9]
- Liquid: l /l/, m /m/, n /n/, r /r/[10]
- Semivowels j /j/, w (v)[11]
- Fricatives: f /f/, s /s/, s /z/, h /h/, ch /x/, sch /ʃ/[10]
- Plosives: g /g/, k /k/, d /d/, t /t/, b /b/, p /p/[10]
- Affricates: z (tz) /ts/ only in loanwords,[12] j /dʒ/ as allophone of j /j /,[13]
Notes:
- The tendency of Bremen to eliminate umlauts is region-specific and does not apply to North Low Saxon as a whole, which would follow Sass (1956).[14]
Morphology
Conjugation
For the Bremen dialect according to Heymann:[15]
The present participle is often used as an adjective and is regularly formed with -nd ( staanden Fotes "how things went and stood"), but the -d is often omitted.[16]
Declination
Nouns
According to Heymann,[17] the following applies to Bremen:
Personal pronouns
According to Heymann,[18] the following applies to Bremen:
According to Heymann,[19] ehr refers more to a person, se more to a thing of the female sex and jem more to persons.
Demonstrative pronouns
According to Heymann,[20] the following applies to Bremen:
Syntax
Genitive
The genitive has largely disappeared from use in Bremen, replaced by paraphrases with von "from" or the possessive genitive, e.g., arme Lüde ehr Pankoken. It is preserved especially in adverbial expressions, e.g., siner Wege gahn "to go one's way" and in family names (Badendamms' Dochter "a daughter from the Bavendamm family").[21]
Accusative and dative
For Bremen according to Heymann:[22] Accusative and dative have partially merged. For pronouns, the merger is complete. For masculine nouns, the dative ending is optional, so that accusative forms are always permissible as datives. For neuter and feminine nouns, the difference in the article forms remains, although mostly only in enclitic forms (uut 'n Huse, up 'r Karken , but in the full form the accusative form applies: uut dat Huus, uut de Karken). After to, dative forms are sometimes found (to'm besten geben).
In contrast, dative forms are more common in written language, because "many people are now abusing the dative, which is based on a misunderstanding of the current state of development of the Low German dialect and, in the conscious or unconscious effort to give their language a more refined character, excessively frequently carries the dative from High German into the Low German representation. ... [I]n particular, in written representation, the accusative should be chosen instead."[23]
Sentence structure
According to Heymann,[24] "the current Low German sentence structure (...) is so strongly influenced by High German that it differs little from it; however, the harsher paratactic sentence structure that is particularly characteristic of the latter (=the Middle German!) should not be disdained either."
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See also
References
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External links
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