Hamburgisch Dialect
Hamburgisch is a group of Northern Low Saxon varieties spoken in Hamburg, Germany. Occasionally, the term Hamburgisch is also used for Hamburg Missingsch, a variety of standard German with Low Saxon substrates. These are urban dialects that have absorbed numerous English and Dutch loanwords, for instance Törn ‘trip’ (< turn) and suutje ‘gently’ (< Dutch zoetjes).
Hamburg is pronounced in these dialects, with a "ch" similar to that in the standard German word Milch. Typical of the Hamburg dialects and other Lower Elbe dialects is the pronunciation (and spelling) eu (pronounced oi ) for the diphthong /œɪ/ (written öö, öh or ö), e.g.
in Hamburg | elsewhere | English |
---|---|---|
keupen | köpen | to buy |
scheun | schöön | beautiful |
However, as in most other Low Saxon (Low German) dialects, the long monophthong /øː/ is pronounced (as in French peu), for instance Kööm ~ Kœm ‘caraway’.
The Low Saxon language in Hamburg is divided in several subdialects, e.g.
- Finkwarder Platt
- Olwarder Platt
- Veerlanner Platt (with many sub-sub-dialects)
- Barmbeker Platt
The Hamborger Veermaster is a famous sea shanty sung in the regional dialect.
Read more about Hamburgisch Dialect: Literature
Famous quotes containing the word dialect:
“The eyes of men converse as much as their tongues, with the advantage that the ocular dialect needs no dictionary, but is understood all the world over.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)