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What is the Plattdütsch Language?

 

 

What is the Plattdütsch Language?

 

There are three branches of the

  Germanic language:

West Germanic (the largest branch),

North Germanic

and East Germanic (which is now extinct). Plattdütsch is a West Germanic language

that has several dialects.

 

Plattdütsch is a regional variation of German spoken in Northern Germany and in parts of other European countries, as well as by European immigrants who settled abroad.

 

Plattdütsch is also referred to as Low German, Plattdüütsch, Plattdütsk, Plattduitsk, Plattdeutsch and Niederdeutsch in Germany. In the Netherlands, it is called Nederduits or Nedersaksisch. In Denmark, it is called Plattysk, Nedertysk or Lavtysk.

 

The language has no specific orthography other than local orthographic standards that vary across the nations where the language is in use.

The SASS writing style (Sass’sche Schrievwies), proposed in 1935 by German linguist Johannes Sass, is most often used in written Plattdütsch, including in official documents.

 

 In Northern Germany, Plattdutsch is spoken as well as in the eastern part of the Netherlands, coastal Poland and southern Denmark.

In Germany, several variations or dialects of the language are spoken.

While the majority of Plattdütsch speakers reside in Germany and the Netherlands, the language is also spoken in immigrant communities in countries like Uruguay, Canada, Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, the United States and Venezuela.

 

 

According to some studies, there are an estimated 301,000 native Plattdütsch speakers in the world, and some 6.7 to 10 million passive speakers (people who can comprehend the language but don’t speak it on a daily basis).

An estimated 1.8 million people speak it on a regular basis in the Netherlands 

 

 the number of Plattdütsch speakers in the world is on a steady decline and the language has almost completely died out in certain regions where it was spoken before.

Several communities, groups, artists, schools and theatres across the world are  actively working towards promoting the language.

 

Plattdütsch is closely related to English, Dutch and Frisian. Anglo-Saxons from North Germany settled in England in the year 450 and developed Old English.

Though there is a historic connection between English and Plattdütsch, both English and Low German have undergone significant evolution over the past ten centuries, erasing many similarities between the two languages.

There are isolated words in English and Low German that are still the same or similar, but mutual intelligibility is not really possible.

 

 

Whether Plattdütsch is a separate language or a mere dialect of German has been a matter of debate for decades.

Many scholars argue that as the language lacks official status and is not used in the media, it is a dialect.

The European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages granted Plattdütsch the status of a regional language in Germany and the Netherlands in 1999.

Plattdütsch is quite distinct from High German (the standard form of German), so much so that a person familiar only with High German might not be able to comprehend Plattdütsch.
 
 

 

"The Pennsylvania Amish speak Plattdütsch. (I don't know about Amish in other parts of the US)

It is still their mother tongue.

They learn english when they attend school."

 

                                                                                    thank you from   Patricia  ( https://gab.ai/P2P )

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