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  1. Early Middle Low German (Standard High German: Frühmittelniederdeutsch): 1200–1350, or 1200–1370; Classical Middle Low German (klassisches Mittelniederdeutsch): 1350–1500, or 1370–1530; Late Middle Low German (Spätmittelniederdeutsch): 1500–1600, or 1530–1650; Middle Low German was the lingua franca of the Hanseatic ...

    • Low German

      The Middle Low German language (Mittelniederdeutsch) is an...

    • History of German

      The Middle Low German language is an ancestor of the modern...

  2. Traditionally, l is pronounced velar (like English l) at the end of a syllable. n becomes [m] before b and p; it becomes [ŋ] before ch, g and k. At the end of a syllable r becomes a vowel. At the beginning of a syllable it is traditionally trilled, but under German influence some speakers now use uvular [ʁ]. s is pronounced [z] before a vowel ...

  3. Middle Low German is a development step of the Low German language ("Niederdeutsch"). It was in use in the northern part of Germany. It developed from Old Saxon, in the Middle Ages. The first records date from the 13th century. It was one of the languages the Hanseatic League used.