Wangerooge Frisian
Extinct East Frisian dialect of Germany
Wangerooge Frisian | |
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Native to | Lower Saxony, Germany |
Region | Wangerooge |
Ethnicity | East Frisians |
Extinct | 1953[citation needed] |
Language family | Indo-European
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | (a proposal to use wgf was rejected in 2022[1]) |
Glottolog | None |
Wangerooge Frisian is an extinct dialect of the East Frisian language, formerly spoken on the East Frisian island of Wangerooge.[2] Wangerooge Frisian was a part of the Weser group of dialects which included the Wangerooge and the equally extinct Wursten dialect.[3] The last speaker died in 1953.
See also
- Frisia
- Frisian Islands
- East Frisians
References
- ^ "Change Request Documentation: 2021-007". SIL International.
- ^ Dammel, Antje; Eitelmann, Matthias; Schmuck, Mirjam (2018-10-15). Reorganising Grammatical Variation: Diachronic studies in the retention, redistribution and refunctionalisation of linguistic variants. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 27–50. ISBN 978-90-272-6342-1.
- ^ "Saterlandic, Part 2: Is Saterfrisian Endangered?". Foundation Operation X for languages, cultures and perspectives. 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2022-12-27.
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Westlauwers– Terschellings |
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Ems | |
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Weser |
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Mainland | |
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Insular |
Italics indicate extinct languages
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