| GERMAN LANGUAGE
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SOME FACTS
German language, member of the West Germanic
group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European
family of languages. It is the official
language of Germany and Austria and is one
of the official languages of Switzerland.
Altogether nearly 100 million people speak
German as their first language, among them
about 77 million in Germany; 8 million in
Austria; 4.5 million in Switzerland; 2 million
in the United States and Canada; about 2
million in Latin America; and several additional
millions throughout Europe, including the
Baltic republics, Belarus, the Czech Republic,
France, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Slovakia,
Romania, Ukraine, and the Balkan states.
German is important as a cultural and commercial
second language for millions of people in
Central, Northern, and Eastern Europe and
in North and South America.
High and Low German
There are two principal divisions of the
German language: High German, or Hochdeutsch,
and Low German, or Plattdeutsch. One of
the most striking differences between them
is the result of a consonant shift (usually
referred to as the second, or High German,
sound shift) that took place before the
8th cent. A.D. in certain West Germanic
dialects. This sound shift affected the
southern areas, which are more elevated
and hence referred to as the High German
region, whereas it left untouched the Low
German prevalent in the lowland regions
of the North. In a broader and purely linguistic
sense, the term Low German can also be extended
to cover all the West Germanic languages
in which the second sound shift did not
take place, such as Dutch, Frisian, and
English.
Distinctive Features
Besides differences in word order, the
German language is unlike English in that
German makes extensive use of inflectional
endings. The verb is inflected to show person,
number, tense, and mood; and the subjunctive
is frequently used. The declensional scheme
has four cases: nominative, genitive, dative,
and accusative. There are two ways of declining
the adjective, and there are three grammatical
genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter.
A distinctive feature of German is its extensive
use of lengthy compound words. For example,
the English “history of antiquity”
is translated into German as Altertumswissenschaft;
the English “worthy of distinction”
is translated as auszeichnungswurdig.
The Gothic or Black Letter form (in German
called Fraktur) of the Roman alphabet, which
first appeared in Europe around the 12th
cent., is now rarely used, although knowledge
of Fraktur is needed in order to read many
works printed before 1945. The Roman alphabet
is now exclusively used in printing. German
is the only language in which all nouns
are capitalized, common as well as proper.
There is a closer relationship between German
spelling and pronunciation than there is
in English.
History of German
Historically, German falls into three main
periods: Old German (c.A.D. 750–c.A.D.
1050); Middle German (c.1050–c.1500);
and Modern German (c.1500 to the present).
The earliest existing records in German
date back to about A.D. 750. In this first
period, local dialects were used in writing,
and there was no standard language. In the
middle period a relatively uniform written
language developed in government after the
various chancelleries of the Holy Roman
Empire began, in the 14th cent., to use
a combination of certain dialects of Middle
High German in place of the Latin that until
then had dominated official writings.
The German of the chancellery of Saxony
was adapted by Martin Luther for his translation
of the Bible. He chose it because at that
time the language of the chancelleries alone
stood out in a multitude of dialects as
a norm, and Luther thought he could reach
many more people through it. The modern
period is usually said to begin with the
German used by Luther, which became the
basis of Modern High German, or modern standard
German. The spread of uniformity in written
German was also helped by printers, who,
like Luther, wanted to attract as many readers
as possible.
During the 18th cent. a number of outstanding
writers gave modern standard German essentially
the form it has today. It is now the language
of church and state, education and literature.
A corresponding norm for spoken High German,
influenced by the written standard, is used
in education, the theater, and broadcasting.
German dialects that differ substantially
from standard German, not only in pronunciation
but also in grammar, are found in regions
of Germany, E France, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein;
Letzeburgesch, an official language of Luxembourg,
is a German dialect spoken by about 400,000
people there. Although dialectal differences
within both the High German and Low German
regions remain, a trend toward uniformity
in the direction of the written standard
is expected partly as a result of widespread
broadcasting, diminishing isolation, and
increased socioeconomic mobility.
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