Westkäslausch
Westkäslausch is a part of Low Prussian dialect of Low German spoken in an area of Poland, that used to be part of Germany. Westkäslausch used to have borders to Breslausch, Natangian, Mundart des Kürzungsgebiets, and Oberländisch.[2] Westkäslausch was spoken in an area having Pieniężno as a kind of midpoint.[3] Diphthongization of Natangian is mostly present with Westkäslausch. [4] Westkäslausch does not have a border to Ostkäslausch.[5] The Preußisches Wörterbuch, a dictionary of dialects, includes Westkäslausch using this wording. Westkäslausch is an older term.
Westkäslausch | |
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Region | East Prussia |
Ethnicity | Germans |
Indo-European
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | lowe1387 [1] |
Notes
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Niederprussisch". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- http://www.tausendschoen-verlag.de/PDF/Memelland.pdf
- Walther Ziesemer: Die ostpreußischen Mundarten Ferdinand Hirt, Breslau, 1924, S. 130
- Walther Ziesemer: Die ostpreußischen Mundarten Ferdinand Hirt, Breslau, 1924, S. 131
- http://www.tausendschoen-verlag.de/PDF/Memelland.pdf
gollark: You seem to be suggesting that a lack of headphone jacks is fine because I can just carry another device for no non-headphone-jack reason.
gollark: I don't want to carry two devices when my phone has an entirely usable audio player app (and can even do video, and store 128GB of stuff, and that sort of thing), and actually has a headphone jack.
gollark: ... but my phone can play audio fine?
gollark: Especially since the alternative seems to just be proprietary headphone things which use up the one port on most phones.
gollark: I think being annoyed about the dropping of a standard and useful I/O feature for dubious reasons is fair.
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