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East Frisian Low Saxon information


East Frisian Low Saxon
East Frisian Low German
East Frisian Saxon
Frisio-Saxon
East Frisian
Oostfräisk,[1] Oostfreesk, dat ostfräske Plattdüts[2]
Native toGermany
RegionEast Frisia
Native speakers
200,000 (2015)[3]
mainly adults
Language family
Indo-European
  • Germanic
    • West Germanic
      • North Sea Germanic
        • Low German
          • West Low German[4] / Northern Low German
            • Northern Low Saxon[4]
              • East Frisian Low Saxon
Language codes
ISO 639-2frs
ISO 639-3frs
Glottologeast2288
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East Frisian Low Saxon, East Frisian Low German, East Frisian Saxon, Frisio-Saxon or simply called East Frisian is a Northern Low Saxon dialect spoken in the East Frisian peninsula of northwestern Lower Saxony.

It is used quite frequently in everyday speech there.[citation needed] About half of the East Frisian population in the coastal region uses the language.[citation needed] A number of individuals, despite not being active speakers of East Frisian Low Saxon, are able to understand it to some extent. However, both active and passive language skills are in a state of decrease.

East Frisian Low Saxon is not to be confused with the East Frisian language; the latter, spoken by about 2,000 individuals in the Saterland region, is a Frisian language, not Low German.

There are several dialects in East Frisian Low Saxon. There are two main groups of dialects. The dialects in the east, called Harlinger Platt, are strongly influenced by Northern Low Saxon of Oldenburg. The western dialects are closer to the Low Saxon Language spoken in the Dutch province of Groningen, Gronings.[5]

East Frisian Low Saxon differs from other Northern Low Saxon dialects in several aspects, which are often linked to Frisian heritage. The language originally spoken in East Frisia and Groningen was Frisian, so the current Low German dialects of East Frisia, as part of the dialects, build on a Frisian substrate which has led to a large amount of unique lexical, syntactic, and phonological items which differ from other Low Saxon variants. Some Old Frisian vocabulary is still in active speech today.[citation needed]

East Frisian features frequent use of diminutives, as in the Dutch language, e.g. kluntje ‘lump of rock sugar’. In many cases, diminutives of names, especially female ones, have become names of their own. For example: Antje (from Anna), Triintje (from Trina = Katharina) etc.

The dialects spoken in East Frisia are closely related to those spoken in the Dutch province of Groningen (Grunnegs, Grünnigs) and in Northern Drenthe (Noordenvelds). The biggest difference seems to be that of loanwords (from Dutch or German, resp.).[citation needed]

Examples
East Frisian Low Saxon Gronings West Frisian Northern Low Saxon English
höör/hör [høːɚ] heur [høːr] har ehr [eə] her
mooj/mooi [moːɪ] mooi [moːɪ] moai scheun [ʃœːin] beautiful, nice, fine
was [vas] was [vas] wie wer [vɛ.iə] was
geböören/geböhren (imp.) [ɡebøːnː] gebeurn [ɣəbøːnː] barre passeern [passe.rn] to happen
prooten/proten [proːtnˑˈ] proaten [proːtnˑˈ] prate snakken [snakɪn] to talk

The standard greeting is Moin (moi in Gronings), used 24 hours a day.[citation needed]

  1. ^ "Oostfräisk wōrdenbauk - Ostfriesisches Wörterbuch". oostfraeisk.org.
  2. ^ Dat näie Testament in dat ostfräske Plattdüts öferset't van O. Boekhoff. Pastor in Loga, Aurich, [1915]
  3. ^ East Frisian Low Saxon at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  4. ^ a b Reinhard Goltz, Andrea Kleene, Niederdeutsch, in: Handbuch der Sprachminderheiten in Deutschland, edited by Rahel Beyer, Albrecht Plewnia, Narr Francke Attempto Verlag, Tübingen, 2020, p. 171ff., here p. 191
  5. ^ "Marron C. Fort: Niederdeutsch und Friesisch zwischen Lauwerzee und Weser" (PDF).

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