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Information About

High German





Language Information

  name High German
  region predominantly central and southern Germany , Liechtenstein , Luxembourg , northern and central Switzerland , Austria , Poland , Alsace and South Tyrol
  familycolor Indo-European
  fam1 Indo-European
  fam2 Germanic
  fam3 West Germanic
  child1 Standard German
  child2 Yiddish
  child3 Luxembourgish
  child4 Central German Dialects
  child5 Upper German Dialects


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, the map of German Dialect s is divided into Upper German (green) and Central German (blue), and the Low German (yellow). The main isoglosses, the Benrath and Speyer lines, are marked black.]]

The High German languages (in German , ''Hochdeutsch'') are any of the Varieties of Standard German , Luxembourgish and Yiddish as well as the local German Dialect s spoken in central and southern Germany , Austria , Liechtenstein , Switzerland , Luxembourg and in neighbouring portions of Belgium , France ( Alsace and northern Lorraine ), Italy and Poland . The language is also spoken diaspora in Romania ('' Transylvania ''), Russia , the United States , Argentina and Namibia .

"High" refers to the Mountain ous areas of central and southern Germany and the Alps , as opposed to Low German spoken along the flat sea coasts of the north. High German can be subdivided into Upper German and Central German (''Oberdeutsch, Mitteldeutsch'').

The German term ''Hochdeutsch'' is also used loosely, but not by linguists, to mean Standard Written German as opposed to dialect, because the standard language developed out of High rather than Low German. This is based on a misunderstanding, and the attempt to rationalise it by suggesting that "high" means "official" doesn't solve the problem. In English, "High German" has never been used to mean "Standard German".


HISTORY

High German as used in Southern Germany, Bavaria and Austria was an important basis for the development of standard German.

The historical forms of the language are Old High German and Middle High German .


CLASSIFICATION

High German are distinguished from other West Germanic varieties in that they took part in the High German Consonant Shift (c. AD 500).
To see this, compare German ''Pfanne'' with English ''pan'' ( to ), German ''zwei'' with English ''two'' ( to ), German ''machen'' with English ''make'' ( to ).
In the High Alemannic Dialects , there is a further shift; ''Sack'' (like English "sack") is pronounced ( to ).


FAMILY TREE

Note that divisions between subfamilies of Germanic are rarely precisely defined; most form continuous clines, with adjacent Dialect s being mutually intelligible and more separated ones not. In particular, there never has been an original " Proto-High German ". For this and other reasons, the idea of representing the relationships between West Germanic language forms in a tree diagram at all is controversial among linguists; what follows should be used with care in the light of this caveat.


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