Tags
- 6
- A
- Achterhooks dialect
- Afrikaans
- Alliance 90/The Greens
- Alps
- Alsatian dialect
- Angeln
- Angles
- Anglo-Frisian languages
- Anglo-Saxon runes
- Anglo-Saxons
- Aorist
- Austrian German
- Back vowel
- Bavarian dialects
- Bergensk
- Bergish dialects
- Bildts
- Bokmål
- Brabantian dialect
- British English
- Burgundians
- Central German
- Challenges
- Chancellor
- Cimbrian language
- Clade
- Close-mid vowel
- Close vowel
- Creole language
- Dalecarlian dialects
- Danish language
- Demonstrative
- Dialect
- Dialect continuum
- Diphthong
- DOI
- Drèents dialects
- Dutch language
- Dutch Low Saxon
- Early Middle Ages
- Early Modern English
- Early New High German
- Early Scots
- East Franconian German
- East Germanic languages
- East Low German
- Elbe
- Elder Futhark
- English
- English language
- English-language vowel changes before historic /r/
- Faroese language
- Far-right politics
- Fingallian
- Flapping
- France
- Frankish language
- Front vowel
- Gelbison
- German cuisine
- Germanic languages
- Germanic peoples
- Germanic philology
- German language
- Germans
- German Standard German
- Germany
- Gerund
- Glottolog
- Going On
- Gothic language
- Graeme Davis
- Grammatical gender
- Great Vowel Shift
- Greek
- Grimm's law
- Gronings dialect
- Gutnish
- H-dropping
- Hessen
- High Alemannic German
- High German languages
- History of Danish
- History of English
- History of the Jews in Scotland
- Hollandic dialect
- Hutterite German
- Icelandic language
- Indo-European ablaut
- Indo-European languages
- Indogermanische Forschungen
- Instrumental case
- International Standard Book Number
- Irminones
- Istvaeones
- Jutes
- Jutland
- Jutlandic dialect
- Labialization
- Language
- Language contact
- Language death
- Language family
- Lausanne
- Lexeme
- Limburgish language
- Linguistic imperialism
- Lorraine Franconian
- Lower Saxony
- Low Franconian languages
- Low German
- Low Saxon
- Luxembourgish
- Martin Haspelmath
- Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
- Middle Dutch
- Middle English
- Middle High German
- Middle Low German
- Migration Period
- Modern English
- Modern Greek
- Morphology
- Multilingualism
- New
- New High German
- North Frisian language
- North Germanic languages
- North Sea
- Northwest Germanic
- Norwegian language
- Nynorsk
- Old Dutch
- Old English
- Old Frisian
- Old High German
- Old Norse
- Old Norwegian
- Old Saxon
- Old Town
- Open vowel
- Over
- Page 6
- Palatine German language
- Particular
- Patois
- Phonological history of English consonant clusters
- Phonological history of English consonants
- Phonology
- Pidgin
- Pronunciation of English ⟨a⟩
- Proto-Germanic language
- Proto-Indo-European language
- Proto-language
- Proto-Norse language
- Realis mood
- Revolutions of 1848
- Rhine
- Rhotacism
- Rhotic consonant
- Rhoticity in English
- Romano-British culture
- Roundedness
- Runic inscriptions
- Sallaans dialect
- Saxons
- Scanian dialect
- Schleswig-Holstein
- Scots language
- Shares
- South Africa
- Southern Bavarian
- South Germanic
- Sparlösa Runestone
- Sprachbund
- Standard German
- Standard language
- Stratum
- Subjunctive mood
- Swabian German
- Swedish dialects
- Swedish language
- Swiss German
- Swiss Standard German
- Switzerland
- T-glottalization
- Thematic vowel
- The world
- Thuringian dialect
- Town
- Trøndersk
- Tweants dialect
- Unserdeutsch language
- Upper German
- Upper Saxon German
- Urkers dialect
- Variety
- Vaud
- Verner's law
- Vestlandsk
- Viennese German
- Vocabulary
- Volga Germans
- Vowel length
- West Central German
- West Flemish
- West Frisian language
- West Saxon dialect
- What
- What's Going On
- Wikipedia
- Wymysorys language
- Yiddish
- Yiddish dialects
- Younger Futhark
- Zeelandic