Elbingian | |
---|---|
Native to | Poland (formerly Germany) |
Region | Elbingian upland ( West Prussia, East Prussia) |
Ethnicity | Germans |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Elbingian[ citation needed] ( German: Mundart der Elbinger Höhe, lit. 'dialect of the Elbingian upland' [1]) was a subdialect of Low Prussian spoken in East Prussia and West Prussia in the region of the Elbingian upland , north of Elbing. [2] It had a border with Oberländisch, Mundart des Kürzungsgebiets and Nehrungisch. It used to end shortly East of Elbing river. [2]
There was a border of /i/, /e/ and /ar/ becoming /e/, /a/ and /or/ respectively in its area. [3] [2] It has many features in common with Natangian. [4]
Elbingian | |
---|---|
Native to | Poland (formerly Germany) |
Region | Elbingian upland ( West Prussia, East Prussia) |
Ethnicity | Germans |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Elbingian[ citation needed] ( German: Mundart der Elbinger Höhe, lit. 'dialect of the Elbingian upland' [1]) was a subdialect of Low Prussian spoken in East Prussia and West Prussia in the region of the Elbingian upland , north of Elbing. [2] It had a border with Oberländisch, Mundart des Kürzungsgebiets and Nehrungisch. It used to end shortly East of Elbing river. [2]
There was a border of /i/, /e/ and /ar/ becoming /e/, /a/ and /or/ respectively in its area. [3] [2] It has many features in common with Natangian. [4]