Dialect group in Central Germany
Central German or Middle German (German : mitteldeutsche Dialekte, mitteldeutsche Mundarten, Mitteldeutsch ) is a group of High German languages spoken from the Rhineland in the west to the former eastern territories of Germany .
Central German divides into two subgroups, West Central German and East Central German .
Central German is distinguished by having experienced the High German consonant shift to a lesser degree than Upper German . It is spoken in the linguistic transition region separated from Northern Germany (Low German /Low Franconian ) by the Benrath line isogloss and separated from Southern Germany (Upper German ) by the Speyer line .
Central German is spoken in large and influential German cities such as Berlin , the former West German capital Bonn , Cologne , Düsseldorf , the main German financial center Frankfurt , Leipzig , and Dresden .
The area corresponds to the geological region of the hilly Central Uplands that stretches from the North German plain to the South German Scarplands , covering the states of Saarland , Rhineland-Palatinate , Hesse , Thuringia and Saxony .
The East Central dialects are the closest to Standard German (chiefly as a written language) among other German dialects. Modern Standard German thus evolved from the vocabulary and spelling of this region, with some pronunciation features from East Franconian German .[ 1]
Classification
See also
Notes
^ Besch, Werner; Wolf, Norbert Richard (2009). Geschichte der deutschen Sprache . Berlin: Erich Schmidt. p. 227. ISBN 9783503098668 .