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  1. Anglo-Frisian distribution map.svg. Size of this PNG preview of this SVG file: 616 × 599 pixels. Other resolutions: 247 × 240 pixels | 493 × 480 pixels | 789 × 768 pixels | 1,052 × 1,024 pixels | 2,105 × 2,048 pixels | 740 × 720 pixels. Original file ‎ (SVG file, nominally 740 × 720 pixels, file size: 842 KB)

  2. Media in category "Frisian-language maps" This category contains only the following file. Map of De Lege Midden.jpg 1,280 × 909; 78 KB.

  3. Profile. Frisian is a West Germanic language spoken in its West Frisian form by an estimated 400,000 people in the province of Friesland, where the total population is around 640,000, and by another 300,000 Frisians who left Friesland to find work elsewhere in the Netherlands. Frisians are bilingual in Frisian and Dutch.

  4. There are over 250 languages indigenous to Europe, and most belong to the Indo-European language family. [1] [2] Out of a total European population of 744 million as of 2018, some 94% are native speakers of an Indo-European language. The three largest phyla of the Indo-European language family in Europe are Romance, Germanic, and Slavic; they ...

  5. But what really dif-ferentiates Fryslân from the rest of the Netherlands – and what both born and bred Frisians and more recently arrived newcomers are so proud of – is that Fryslân has its own language and culture: Frisian. Practically all of its 642.000 inhabitants understand the language, and the vast majority speak Frisian in addition ...

  6. There are approximately 450,000 speakers of West Frisian, making it the second official language of the Netherlands alongside Dutch. It is primarily spoken in Friesland, where it holds a strong presence in daily life, education, media, and official documentation. West Frisian has its origins in the migration of Germanic tribes to the region in ...

  7. Footnote 10 The Frisian language seems to have been spoken by only some of those whom we encounter as ‘Frisians’ in the (early) medieval sources. In the eighth century, Frisian was spoken from the mouth of the Oude Rijn (Old Rhine) at Katwijk in the south up to the mouth of the Weser in the east, and possibly also on the North Frisian islands.