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  1. Ingvaeonic, also known as North Sea Germanic, is a postulated grouping of the West Germanic languages that encompasses Old Frisian, Old English, and Old Saxon. [15] However, since Anglo-Frisian features occur in Low German and especially in its older language stages, there is a tendency to prefere the Ingvaeonic classification instead of the Anglo-Frisian one, which also takes Low German into ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › FrisiaFrisia - Wikipedia

    Frisia [a] is a cross-border cultural region in Northwestern Europe. Stretching along the Wadden Sea, it encompasses the north of the Netherlands and parts of northwestern Germany. Wider definitions of ‘Frisia’ may include the island of Rem and the other Danish Wadden Sea Islands.

  3. Overview, July 2019. The Corpus Oudfries/Old Frisian contains a large sample of the Old Frisian language from ca. 1200-1550, which has been lemmatized and PoS-tagged by Rita van de Poel as part of her PhD research. The corpus can be searched on three linguistic levels: words (as occurring in the text witness), lemmata and/or part-of-speech.

  4. Old Frisian longhouse. Old Frisian longhouses were, as the name indicates, long-bodied houses which can be found in the Dutch province Friesland. [1] This type of house had more than two different parts behind or beside each part. It is the forerunner of the "Head-Neck-Body farmhouse".

  5. The Frisian Kingdom ( West Frisian: Fryske Keninkryk ), also known as Magna Frisia, is a modern name for the post-Roman Frisian realm in Western Europe in the period when it was at its largest (650–734). This dominion was ruled by kings and emerged in the mid-7th century and probably ended with the Battle of the Boarn in 734 when the Frisians ...

  6. Linguistic map of Schleswig in the mid-19th century. North Frisian is a minority language of Germany, spoken by about 10,000 people in North Frisia. [2] The language is part of the larger group of the West Germanic Frisian languages. The language comprises 10 dialects which are themselves divided into an insular and a mainland group.

  7. The Frisian settlers on the coast of South Jutland (today's Northern Friesland) also spoke Old Frisian, but there are no known medie Old Frisian was a West Germanic language spoken between the 8th and 16th centuries along the North Sea coast, roughly between the mouths of the Rhine and Weser rivers.