enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. German language in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the...

    Throughout the history of the German language in the United States, through the coexistence with English, there are many loanwords which have been absorbed into the American variety of German. There are also many usages which have been preserved in American German varieties including usages from the numerous dialects of the German regions.

  3. Germanic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_languages

    The Germanic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family spoken natively by a population of about 515 million people [nb 1] mainly in Europe, North America, Oceania, and Southern Africa. The most widely spoken Germanic language, English, is also the world's most widely spoken language with an estimated

  4. Foreign-language influences in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign-language...

    Germanic languages, as inherited from Old English, from Proto-Germanic, or a more recent borrowing from a Germanic language such as Old Norse, excluding Germanic words borrowed from a Romance language: 25%; [a] Greek: 5.32%; no etymology given: 4.04%; derived from proper names: 3.28%; and; all other languages: less than 1%.

  5. German Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Americans

    German Americans in many cities, such as Milwaukee, brought their strong support of education, establishing German-language schools and teacher training seminaries (Töchter-Institut) to prepare students and teachers in German language training. By the late 19th century, the Germania Publishing Company was established in Milwaukee, a publisher ...

  6. Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_Contact_and_the...

    Since Saami is known to have borrowed many words from a language now lost as Saami culture spread northwards into Scandinavia, Schrijver argues that Saami, West Germanic and North Germanic were all affected in similar ways by contact with a language or group of languages which 'shared a peculiar vowel system, whose features were impressed on ...

  7. History of German - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_German

    The Middle Low German language is an ancestor of the modern Low German. It was spoken from about 1100 to 1500, splitting into West Low German and East Low German. The neighbour languages within the dialect continuum of the West Germanic languages were Middle Dutch in the West and Middle High German in the South, later substituted by Early New ...

  8. Hutterite German - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hutterite_German

    Hutterite German is a koiné language originally based on the Bavarian dialects spoken in Tyrol, home of Jacob Hutter and many early Hutterites, but it shifted its base to Carinthia dialects in the mid-18th century when so-called "Landler", Crypto-Protestants from Carinthia, were forced by empress Maria Theresia to resettle to Transylvania.

  9. Germanic substrate hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_substrate_hypothesis

    The Germanic substrate hypothesis attempts to explain the purportedly distinctive nature of the Germanic languages within the context of the Indo-European languages.Based on the elements of Common Germanic vocabulary and syntax which do not seem to have cognates in other Indo-European languages, it claims that Proto-Germanic may have been either a creole or a contact language that subsumed a ...