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Palatinate German

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Palatine German
Pfälzisch[1]
Spoken in Germany[1]
Total speakers unknown[1]
Language family Indo-European
Writing system Latin (German variant)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-1 None
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3 pfl

Palatine German (Pfälzisch/Pälzisch or Pfaelzisch/Paelzisch) is a West Franconian dialect of German which is spoken in the Rhine Valley between the cities of Zweibrücken, Kaiserslautern, and Mannheim, and the border to the Alsace region (France) and the Rhine River. Pennsylvania German, or Pennsylvania Dutch is descended primarily from the Palatine German dialects spoken by Germans who immigrated to North America from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries and who chose to maintain their native language. Danube Swabians in Croatia and Serbia also use many elements of it. Some examples of the differences between High German and Pfaelzisch are:

Pfälzisch High German English Equivalent
Mais Mäuse mice
Lais Läuse lice
Grumbeer Kartoffel potato
Schnoog(e) Mücke a fly
Bääm Bäume trees
Schdää Stein stone
soi sein his (possessive)
unser unsere ours
nit nicht not
Fusch Fisch fish
ebbes etwas something
Ärwett Arbeit work
Dor Tor gate
Abbel Apfel apple
Haan Haben have

A few examples of sentence pronunciation in Pfälzisch would be:

Isch habb's'm schunn verzehlt, awwer där hot mer's nit geglawt.

In standard German, the sentence would read as such:

Ich hab's ihm schon erzählt, aber er hat's mir nicht geglaubt.

The English translation would be,

I already told [it to] him, but he didn't believe me.

Hasche au Hunger?

In standard German, the sentence would read as such:

Hast du auch Hunger?

The English translation would be,

Are you hungry, too?

Palatine speakers tend to swallow some of the other letters that standard German speakers enunciate. It's important to point out that pronunciation and grammar vary from region to region (even from town to town.) Palatine Germans often can tell the part of Palatinate or even the village where other speakers are from. Something all Palatine dialects have in common is that the genitive isn't used, same as the German imperfect.

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