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Amana German

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Revision as of 10:58, 15 April 2024 by Sarcelles (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) Language in Iowa based on West Central German
Amana German
Native toUnited States
RegionAmana Colonies in Iowa
Language familyIndo-European
Language codes
ISO 639-3

Amana German (Template:Lang-de or Kolonie-Deutsch, lit. Colony German) is a regiolect based on West Central German that is still spoken by several hundred people in the Amana Colonies in Iowa.

The Amana Colonies were founded in 1856 by Inspirationalists of German origin who came from West Seneca near Buffalo in New York. Amana is derived from the Hessian dialect, which is a West Central German dialect. There are seven villages in Amana with slightly different dialect features.

Even though the use of the language is in decline, it is far from being moribund. There are several major studies about the language of Amana.

References

  1. Philip E. Webber: Kolonie-Deutsch: Life and Language in Amana, Ames, 2006, page 14.

Literature

  • Philip E. Webber: Kolonie-Deutsch: Life and Language in Amana. Ames, 2006. (Originally 1993; expended ed., University of Iowa Press, Iowa City, 2009)
  • Michael T. Putnam: Anaphors in contact: The distribution of intensifiers and reflexives in Amana German in "Studies on German-language islands". Amsterdam et al., 2011.
  • Lawrence L. Rettig: Grammatical structures in Amana German. Dissertation at the University of Iowa, 1970.
  • Joan Liffring-Zug: Life in Amana: reporters' views of the communal way, 1867 - 1935. Iowa City, 1998.

See also

Varieties of German spoken outside Europe
Africa
North America
South America
Asia and the Pacific
Germanic languages
According to contemporary philology
West
Anglo-Frisian
Anglic
Frisian
Historical forms
East Frisian
North Frisian
West Frisian
Low German
Historical forms
West Low German
East Low German
Low Franconian
Historical forms
Standard variants
West Low Franconian
East Low Franconian
Cover groups
High German
(German)
Historical forms
Standard German
Non-standard variants
and creoles
Central German
West Central German
East Central German
Upper German
North and East
North
Historical forms
West
East
East
Philology
Language subgroups
Reconstructed
Diachronic features
Synchronic features


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