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Lionel Mandrake

(4,123 posts)
Sun Oct 31, 2021, 11:04 AM Oct 2021

German lumpers and splitters

Is German a language or a family of languages? Experts disagree about this. Depending on how you answer the question, you are either a lumper or splitter.

Similar questions can be asked about other languages and even about taxa in biology, where the struggle between lumpers and splitters can be intense. But I digress.

I'm no expert, but I side with the lumpers. I think of Standard German, Swiss German, Plattdeutsch, etc. as dialects of a single language, because having taken German classes in school I find that I can understand most of them to some extent. Plattdeutsch, aka Low German, is borderline. It's close to Dutch, which I can't begin to understand.

Once I tried having a conversation with someone who was fluent in Yiddish. The experiment was moderately successful. Therefore I would argue that even Yiddish is a German dialect, although it's usually classified as a separate language.

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German lumpers and splitters (Original Post) Lionel Mandrake Oct 2021 OP
I guess it depends on how one defines a language. Ocelot II Oct 2021 #1
Frisian IbogaProject Oct 2021 #2
Yiddish also uses a different alphabet. Behind the Aegis Oct 2021 #3
Interesting... My Eastern European Aunt called Yiddish, Plattdeutsch. She spoke both mitch96 Oct 2021 #4
There are a few different things going on. Igel Nov 2021 #5

Ocelot II

(121,224 posts)
1. I guess it depends on how one defines a language.
Sun Oct 31, 2021, 12:10 PM
Oct 2021

If you're a typological linguist, a language will have a particular structure related to the order of a subject, object and verb in a sentence, or the way certain sounds are produced. A language might be considered analytic (that is, the sense of a sentence is determined mostly by word order and the use of prepositions) or synthetic (the meaning is determined by the way the words in the sentence are modified - conjugation of verbs and declension of nouns). German variants tend to differ mostly with respect to pronunciation and local nomenclature but their essential structure, particularly as to word order (sticking the verb at the end of a sentence, for example) is basically the same, so I think most linguists would call them dialects. Yiddish is probably at the far edge of a German dialect and is often classified as a separate language although it is structurally mostly German.

Behind the Aegis

(54,901 posts)
3. Yiddish also uses a different alphabet.
Sun Oct 31, 2021, 02:48 PM
Oct 2021

Unlike the other German dialects, Yiddish uses a completely different alphabet. Furthermore, Yiddish diverged from German several hundred years ago, when it was actually a dialect of Middle German. There are different versions of Yiddish, dialects, I suppose, but the Orthodox version, standard, is very similar to German in many ways, but it does have some grammatical differences and some very different vocabulary. However, if you understand German, Yiddish won't be too terribly difficult to understand in spoken form.

mitch96

(14,712 posts)
4. Interesting... My Eastern European Aunt called Yiddish, Plattdeutsch. She spoke both
Sun Oct 31, 2021, 03:14 PM
Oct 2021

and used the analogy of Proper Queens english and Appalachian southern english...
Kinda sorta the same but not,...YMMV
m

Igel

(36,187 posts)
5. There are a few different things going on.
Tue Nov 2, 2021, 08:46 PM
Nov 2021

Yiddish is based on one area of German, hundreds of years ago.

Plattdeutsch is also the dialect spoken in Northern Germany.

And since a lot of people from there migrated under Catherine the Great to Russia, where they lived for a century or more and developed in their own way in relative isolation and with Russian or Ukrainian influence before migrating to places like Argentina or Kansas, they call their variety of German Plattdeutsch (although the speakers of that language variety I knew prounced it more "plattdietsch&quot .

But, yeah, the problem with splitters and lumpers is that they have different viewpoints. One looks for commonalities, the other for differences. Which is most important?

Well, in the end it depends on the speakers and what they want. If they view themselves as one community, they're likely to change to be more alike. African-American English in the US did that for over a century. The Czechs and Slovaks had no trouble making do with interintelligibility for decades when they spoke Czechoslovak. Since the 1960s, African-American English has diverged, at times with increasing speed, from "white middle-class English". And in the 1990s it wasn't uncommon for me to watch a Slovak speaker stare uncomprehendingly at somebody speaking Czech to him.

The classic study (to my mind) was published in the '80s and considered a dialect of some Mayan language spoken in Guatemala. The large-ish village or small town was divided by a river, and the two sides considered themselves one town and one 'community.' The field researchers documenting vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation, and transcribing stories and narratives tended to agree--the differences were small. In the 1930s something happened--something that greatly offended one side. In the '60s and then again in the '80s somebody went back for follow up research and by the '80s vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation had changed so much that it was clear from the texts and stories transcribed that younger speakers from one side of the river would have real trouble understanding younger speakers from the other side. Took 50 years of hostility.

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