Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Old High Germanspeaking area within the Holy Roman Empire in 962. Old High German encompasses the dialects that had undergone the Second Sound Shift during the 6th century—namely all of Elbe Germanic and most of the Weser–Rhine Germanic dialects.

  2. Old High German, any of the West Germanic dialects spoken in the highlands of southern Germany, Switzerland, and Austria until the end of the 11th century. High German differs most noticeably from the other West Germanic languages in its shift of the p, t, and k sounds to ff, ss, and hh,

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. However, all German dialects belong to the dialect continuum of High German and Low German. In the past (roughly until the end of World War II ), there was a dialect continuum of all Continental West Germanic languages , as nearly any pair of contiguous dialects were perfectly mutually intelligible.

  4. 24 de out. de 2019 · So, we really have three EGDs that were instrumental in the formation of the German dialects: Old Saxon. Old Low Franconian. and. Old High German. Saxons are associated with Old Saxon, and therefore the later Low German dialects of northern Germany. The Franks, with Old Low Franconian, are associated with the later dialects of Dutch ...

  5. The aim of the “Old High German Dictionary” is to record and make accessible the entire surviving vocabulary of the earliest attested German from all types of text. It strives for the greatest possible depth of processing and comprehensive information on all language-historical questions in order to provide the historical lexicography of ...

  6. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Old High German, a group of dialects for which there was no standard literary language, was spoken until about 1100 in the highlands of southern Germany. During Middle High German times (after 1100), a standard language based on the Upper German dialects (Alemannic and Bavarian) in the southernmost part of the German speech area ...

  7. History. Old High German evolved from about 500 AD. Around 1200 the Swabian and East Franconian varieties of Middle High German became dominant as a court and poetry language ( Minnesang) under the rule of the House of Hohenstaufen .