Speyer line
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In German dialectology, the Speyer line or Main line (Main river) is an isogloss separating the Central German dialects to the north, which have a stop in words like Appel "apple", from the Upper German dialects to the south, which have an affricate: Apfel.[1] The line begins in Alsace near Strasbourg, and runs north-east to Thüringen, crossing the Rhine at Speyer. After passing close to Erfurt, it turns south-east and continues into the formerly German-speaking parts of Bohemia. The line is exemplified by place-names containing an uncombined /p/ phoneme, which lie north of the line (Paderborn, Potsdam, Wuppertal), while those with an affricate /pf/ (Pfaffenhofen, Pforzheim) lie mostly to the south.
See also[]
- Benrath line
- Uerdingen line
- High German consonant shift
References[]
- ^ Rolf Bergmann; Claudine Moulin; Nikolaus Ruge (2019). Alt- und Mittelhochdeutsch: Arbeitsbuch zur Grammatik der älteren deutschen Sprachstufen und zur deutschen Sprachgeschichte (in German) (10th ed.). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 112.
Categories:
- Isoglosses
- German language
- Germanic language stubs