Alsatian language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Alsatian Elsässerdeutsch, Alsacien |
||
|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | France | |
| Total speakers: | more than 0.7 million | |
| Language family: | Indo-European Germanic West Germanic High German Upper German Alemannic German Alsatian |
|
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | none | |
| ISO 639-2: | gsw | |
| ISO 639-3: | gsw | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Alsatian (Elsässerditsch; French: Alsacien; German: Elsässisch or Elsässerdeutsch) is a Low Alemannic German dialect spoken in most of Alsace, a region in eastern France which has passed between French and German control many times.
Not readily intelligible to speakers of standard German, it is closely related to other nearby Alemannic dialects, such as Swiss German, Swabian, and Badisch. It is often confused with Lorraine Franconian, a more distantly related Franconian dialect spoken in the far north-east of Alsace and in neighboring Lorraine.
Many speakers of Alsatian write in standard German. Street names in the Alsace may use Alsatian spellings (they were formerly displayed only in French but are now bilingual in some places, especially Strasbourg)
Contents |
Alsatian has a rather simple set of 14 consonants:
| Labial | Alveolar | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||
| Stop | b̥ | d̥ | ɡ̊, kʰ | ||
| Fricative | f | s | ʃ | ç | |
| Sonorant | ʋ | l, ɾ |
Two consonants are restricted in their distribution: /kʰ/ only occurs at the beginning of a word or morpheme, and then only if followed immediately by a vowel; /ŋ/ never occurs at the beginning of a word or morpheme.
Alsatian, like several Germanic languages, has a typologically unusual phonation in its stops. The consonants here transcribed /b̥/, /d̥/, /ɡ̊/ are called "lenis", an ambiguous term that in the case of Alsatian means partially voiced: The vocal cords are positioned as for voicing, but do not actually vibrate. That is, they are technically voiceless, but without the open glottis usually associated with voiceless stops. They contrast with both modally voiced /b, d, ɡ/ and modally voiceless /p, t, k/ in French borrowings. (English is somewhat similar: often English /b, d, g/ are also only partially voiced.)
As in German, the phoneme /ç/ has a velar allophone [x] after back vowels (/u/, /o/, /ɔ/, and /a/ in those speakers who do not pronounce this as [æ]), and palatal [ç] elsewhere. In southern dialects, there is a tendency to pronounce it /x/ in all positions, and in Strasbourg the palatal allophone tends to become [ʃ], and conflate with the phoneme /ʃ/.
Short vowels: /ʊ/, /o/, /ɒ/, /a/ ([æ] in Strasbourg), /ɛ/, /ɪ/, /i/, /y/.
Long vowels: /ʊː/, /oː/, /ɒː/, /aː/, /ɛː/, /eː/, /iː/, /yː/
| English | Alsatian | High Alemannic | Standard German | Standard French | Swabian German dialect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| house | Hüüs [hyˑs] | Huus | Haus | maison | Hous |
| loud | lüüt [lyˑd̥] | luut | laut | bruyant | lout |
| people | Lit [lɪd̥] | Lüt | Leute | gens | Leid |
| today | hit [hɪd̥] | Hüt | heute | aujourd'hui | heid |
| beautiful | schen [ʃeːn] | schö | schön | beau | sche |
| Earth | Ard [aˑɾd̥] | Ärd | Erde | terre | Erd |
| Fog | Nabel [naːb̥l̩] | Näbel | Nebel | brouillard | Nebl |
| water | Wàsser [ʋɑsəɾ] | Wasser | Wasser | eau | Wasser |
| man | Mànn [mɑˑn] | Maa | Mann | homme | Mà |
| eat | assa [asə] | ässe | essen | manger | essa |
| to drink | trenka [d̥ɾənɡ̊ə] | trinkche | trinken | boire | trenka |
| little | klai [ɡ̊laɪ̯] | chlei | klein | petit, petite | kloi |
| child | Kind [kɪnd̥] | Chind | Kind | enfant | Kind |
| day | Däi [] | Dag | Tag | jour | Dàg |
| woman | Frài [] | Frou | Frau | femme | Frau |
The constitution of the Fifth Republic states that French alone is the official language of the Republic. However Alsatian, along with other regional languages, are recognized by the French government in the official list of languages of France. A 1999 INSEE survey counted 548,000 adult speakers of Alsatian in France, making it the second most-spoken regional language in France (after Occitan). Like all regional languages in France, however, the transmission of Alsatian is on the decline. While 39% of the adult population of Alsace speaks Alsatian, only one in four children speaks it, and only one in ten children uses it regularly.
- (French)[1] François Héran, et al. (2002) "La dynamique des langues en France au fil du XXe siècle". Population et sociétés 376, Ined.
- (French)[2] "L'alsacien, deuxième langue régionale de France" Insee, Chiffres pour l'Alsace no. 12, December 2002
- (French)Brunner, Jean-Jacques. L'alsacien sans peine. ASSiMiL, 2001. ISBN 2-7005-0222-1
- (French)Laugel-Erny, Elsa. Cours d'alsacien. Les Editions du Quai, 1999.
- (French)Matzen, Raymond, and Léon Daul. Wie Geht's ? Le dialecte à la portée de tous La Nuée Bleue, 1999. ISBN 2-7165-0464-4
- (French)Matzen, Raymond, and Léon Daul. Wie Steht's ? Lexiques alsacien et français, Variantes dialectales, Grammaire La Nuée Bleue, 2000. ISBN 2-7165-0525-X
- Euromosaic - German in France - The status of German Languages in France.
- Alsatian placenames
- (German)Wörterbuch der elsässischen Mundarten
