High German spoken in central and south Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
Low German is spoken in northern Germany and the Netherlands.
Both High German and Low German are regional.
High German and Low German are two different branches of the German language. High German is spoken in the central and southern regions of Germany, while Low German is spoken in the northern regions and the Netherlands. High German is the standard form of the language, while Low German has many dialects and variations.
The two major forms of the German language are High German (Hochdeutsch), which is the standard form of the language, and Low German (Plattdeutsch), which is spoken in Northern Germany and the Netherlands.
Some Mennonites settled in Bolivia. They speak Low German (Plautdietsch) as a native language. High Germany is used for church service.
The two major forms of the German language are High German (Hochdeutsch) and Low German (Plattdeutsch). High German is the standardized form used for writing and formal situations, while Low German is a group of dialects spoken mainly in the northern regions of Germany.
High German refers to the variety of the German language spoken in central and southern Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, while Low German refers to the variety spoken in the northern regions of Germany. High German is the dominant form of German used in formal settings and written language, while Low German is often considered a dialect and is mainly spoken in informal settings. The two varieties also differ in terms of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
German 'began' when Old High German and Old Low German started to split off from West Germanic in the 6th century AD.
pet form of a Germanic personal name formed with Middle Low German riden, Middle High German ritan 'to ride'
Dutch is the language of Netherlands, whereas the Deutsch is the language of Germany. They are not the same. The scripts are similar but that does not make them the same. Plus the phonetics and the words are totally different. Dutch is a Low German language, German is a High German language. The High and Low is about geography btw. The main difference, apart from a lot of different words, is the so called High German consonant shift.
Low German. It's in fact not only a dialect, but a real language. That causes something real odd : The people in the north speak a better High German than southern people. For southern Germans the official High German is just another dialect, because the original local dialect is always a High German dialect. For northern people it's almost a foreign language . So over the last hundred years the northern people learned a perfect High German, but Low German was more and more forgotten. Today the majority in the north can understand Low German, and also speak a little bit, but to meet someone who speaks it fluently isn't that easy.
English: "low" is German: "gering", "leise", niedrig", "schwach".
"good Eten" Native speaker of Low German/Low Saxon.
Luxembourgish Pennsylvania German Alemannic German Austro-Bavarian German Mócheno language Cimbrian language Hutterite German Yiddish Low Franconian Dutch and its dialects Afrikaans Low German West Low German East Low German Plautdietsch (Mennonite Low German) English Lowland Scots Yola (extinct) Icelandic Faroese Greenlandic Norse (extinct) Norn (extinct) Danish (Nowegian and Danish are the same language) Swedish Gutnish