- Uerdingen line
The Uerdingen Line is the
isogloss withinWest Germanic languages that separates dialects which preserve the -"k" sound at the end of a word (north of the line) from dialects in which the word final -"k" has changed to word final -"ch" (IPA [x] ) (south of the line). An example is the first person singular pronoun ("I" in English): north of the line, this word is "ik", while south of the line the word is "ich". This sound shift is the one that progressed the farthest north among the consonant shifts that characterize High German and Middle German dialects. The line passes throughBelgium , theNetherlands , andGermany .The western end of the Uerdingen line is at
Bierbeek in the Belgian province ofFlemish Brabant . From there, it runs through the province of Belgian Limburg. North of the provincial capital,Hasselt , it crosses the Belgian-Dutch border into the Dutch province also named Limburg. Thence it goes straight east, passing south of the Dutch border town ofVenlo to cross into Germany'sRhineland . It passes throughKempen andHüls , then along the northern side ofKrefeld , and crosses theRhine atUerdingen (nowadays a district of Krefeld). From there, the isogloss passes south ofSaarn (part ofMülheim an der Ruhr ),Kettwig (part ofEssen ),Elberfeld (part ofWuppertal ),Gummersbach , andWiedenest (part ofBergneustadt ). East of the Rhineland, the isogloss runs byHalbe ,Hermsdorf ,Freidorf andStoki in southernBrandenburg in eastern Germany.South of the Uerdingen line in Belgium and the Netherlands, the Germanic dialect
Limburgish is spoken, in the territories of the former duchies in Brabant and Limburg.ee also
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High German consonant shift
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