Middle High German language
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Assorted References
- major reference
- In West Germanic languages: History
…language of which is called Middle High German, beginning in roughly 1050. First, there were changes in the language itself, among which were the unvoicing of final b, d, and g (compare Old High German grab ‘grave,’ rad ‘wheel,’ and tag ‘day’ with Middle High German grap, rat, and tac;…
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- In West Germanic languages: History
development of
- German language
- In German language: High German (Hochdeutsch)
During Middle High German times (after 1100), a standard language based on the Upper German dialects (Alemannic and Bavarian) in the southernmost part of the German speech area began to arise. Middle High German was the language of an extensive literature that includes the early 13th-century…
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- In German language: High German (Hochdeutsch)
- Yiddish
- In Yiddish literature: Old Yiddish literature
… period was similar to contemporary Middle High German, but it was distinctive because it was written in Hebrew characters, incorporated Hebrew loanwords, and reconfigured some aspects of the Germanic component. As a result of the eastward migration of Jewish communities, by the 18th century Slavic loanwords also had become an…
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- In Yiddish literature: Old Yiddish literature