One can't speak of a Rhenish dialect area.[1]
Its northern areas are also covered by the more modern term of Meuse-Rhenish, which exclusively refers to the Low Franconian varieties mentioned above.
The eastern areas in the North are also said to speak Bergish, a term which has its roots in political history and regional pride rather than linguistic similarities. Likewise, the Eifel inhabitants say, they were speaking Eifelplatt, while linguists rather refer to the Ripuarian varieties of the North, and the Moselle-Franconian ones of the South of the Eifel.
All these local languages and local language groups existed long before Standard German, and developed in parallel since the latter came into existence.
Also the Regiolect of the Rhineland, geographically roughly coinciding with the former Prussian Rhine Province, is being called Rhinelandic. It is of comparatively recent origin, and derives from Standard German but takes up some lexical and grammatical and phonetic features of the local languages, that Standard German normally does not have. Most of those features are not used in other German regiolects, and are often hardly or not understood in other regiolect areas.
Rhenish (Rheinisch) is a regiolect.[2]
^ abMichael Elmentaler, Sprachgrenzen und Sprachschichtungen im Rheinland: Zur sprachlichen Genese des »Rheinischen«, in: Bernd Kortländer, Gunter E. Grimm (eds.), Joseph A. Kruse (series-ed.), »Rheinisch«: Zum Selbstverständnis einer Region (= Heinrich-Heine Institut Düsseldorf: Archiv, Bibliothek, Museum vol. 9), Verlag J. B. Metzler, Stuttgart / Weimar, 2001, p. 119ff., here p. 120ff.
^Elvira Topalović, Julia Settinieri, Sprachliche Bildung (= LinguS - Linguistik und Schule: Von der Sprachtheorie zur Unterrichtspraxis vol. 8), Narr Francke Attempto Verlag, Tübingen, 2023, chapter 3.1 Innere und äußere Mehrsprachigkeit, in the definition of Standardvarietäten oder Standardlekte: „[...] Regiolekten (z. B. Rheinisch), Dialekten (z. B. Kölsch), [...]“
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