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Basel is a Swiss city ner the point where the borders of the three countries come together.
Hoi means hello in Swiss German
Friedrich Nietzsche was German. He was born in Prussia, which is part of present-day Germany.
A "kitten" (a baby cat) can be translated as:KätzchenKätzleinKätzli (Swiss German)Katzerl (southern Germany, Austria)
Swiss. Only problem is how could a man be certified as a Merchant Marine captain from a country that is totally landlocked, though it has lake borders with Austria and Germany?
There are officially only 4 German spoken countries: Germany Austria Swiss Lichtenstein
Schubert is a German, Austrian, or Swiss name.
The Swiss speak Swiss German.
Swiss German (Schwyzerdütsch) is generally regarded as a variety (or rather, a set of varieties/dialects) of German.Swiss German although it is spelt the the same as German German is; Swiss German is pronounced completely differently (enough to cause people fluent in German German to have trouble understanding Swiss German).AnswerIn fact Swiss German is not written (or spelt) the same way as Germany's German (only if it's about some completely identical words). Switzerland has abolished Swiss German written language for any official issue - they all write the documents in 'real' German. This doesn't mean people never write in Swiss German - they just restrain it to small-talk stuff or to chat. In fact - as the Swiss German is considered as some relicts of medieval German - there are even official books with standard rules... telling you how to write correctly in this or that different Swiss German dialect. It's just that these rules are old - and people are used to write Swiss German the way they think it is right...
Either German, French, Italian or Rumantsch (a 100% Swiss language with latin roots). The three main languages also exist in Swiss dialect forms... especially the Swiss Italian has much one to one latin in it (even more than Italian itself). And the Swiss German is some kind of medieval German developing in another way than the German did in Germany or Austria (or the Netherlands - as dutch was called 'low-German' due to geographical aspects).
The Swiss national bank bought gold, Germany stole from Jews and occupied countries and thereby enabled Germany to pay for weapons etc. in Swiss Francs, rather than "Reichsmark", the German currency, which was not accepted internationally.
First, there is no "Swiss German." In German, Auf Deutsch, "You are very beautiful," is "Du bist sehr schön" (informally. While there is no Swiss German, there are certainly a variety of dialects, as there are different dialect in every city and region in Germany. This sentence, however, will differ little if at all.