Pennsylvania Dutch English
Pennsylvania Dutch English | |
---|---|
Native to | United States, Canada |
Region | Pennsylvania; Ohio; Indiana; Ontario; and elsewhere |
Language family | Indo-European
|
Writing system | Latin (English alphabet) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Counties in "Pennsylvania Dutch Country", one of several regions in which Pennsylvania German and "Pennsylvania Dutch English" have traditionally been spoken. |
Pennsylvania Dutch English is a dialect of English that has been influenced by the Pennsylvania German language. It is largely spoken in South Central Pennsylvania, both by people who are monolingual (in English) and bilingual (in Pennsylvania German and English). The dialect has been dying out, as non-Amish younger Pennsylvania Germans tend to speak modern General American English. Very few non-Amish members of these people can speak the Pennsylvania German language, although most know some words and phrases. The World War II Generation was the last generation in which Pennsylvania Dutch was widely spoken outside the Old Order Amish and Old Order Mennonite communities.
Contents
1 Features of Pennsylvania German influence
2 See also
3 References
4 External links
Features of Pennsylvania German influence
Pennsylvania Dutch English differs from standard American English in various ways. Some of its hallmark features include the following:
- Widespread devoicing of obstruents.[further explanation needed]
- The use of certain vowel variants in specific phonological contexts.[further explanation needed]
- The use of Pennsylvania German verb and noun stems in word construction.[example needed]
- Specific intonation patterns for questions.[example needed]
- Special placement of prepositional phrases in sentences (so that "Throw some hay over the fence for the horse" might be rendered "Throw the horse over the fence some hay").
- The use of "ain't" and "not" or "say" as question tags.
- The use of "still" as a habitual verbal marker.[further explanation needed]
- Use of the word "yet" to mean "still," such as "do you work at the store yet?" to mean "do you still work at the store?"
- Use of terms such as "doncha know" and "so I do" or "so he does" at the end of declaratory sentences.
- Use of the word "awhile" at the end of sentences proposing simultaneous actions (e.g. "Go get the tea out of the pantry; I'll start boiling the water awhile.").
- Omitting "to be" from the passive construction in an infinitive following "needs" or "wants"( e.g. "the car needs cleaned" instead of "the car needs to be cleaned").
Other calques and idioms include:
Pennsylvania Dutch English | Standard English | Standard German |
---|---|---|
Make wet? | Is it going to rain? | Wird es regnen? |
Outen the lights. | Turn off the lights. | Mach das Licht aus. |
The candy is all. | There is no more candy. | Die Süßigkeiten sind alle. |
Don't eat yourself full. | Don't fill yourself up. | Iss dich nicht voll. |
There's cake back yet. | There is cake to come. | Es gibt da noch Kuchen. |
It wonders me. | It makes me wonder. | Das wundert mich. |
Hurrieder | Faster | Schneller |
Spritzing | Lightly raining | nieseln |
Rutsching | Squirming | auf dem Bauch rutschen |
Schusslich | Clumsy with things usually because of hurrying | schusselig |
Doplich | Clumsy with self | Tollpatschig sein. |
Yah, well. | Whatever, or It makes no difference | Ja, wohl. |
Wutz | Pig (when someone eats a lot) | die Wutz |
Kutz / kutzing | Vomit / vomiting | die Kotze / kotzen |
Wonnernaus | A polite way of saying "None of your business" | |
Schtriwwelich | Uncombed or stringy | strubbelig |
Brutzing, Grexing | Whining/complaining | Jammern, Klagen |
Wuntz (Once) | for a second/real quick | Ein Moment / mal |
Dippy ecks | over easy, soft-boiled eggs | Spiegeleier |
Mox nix | irrelevant | Das macht nichts OR Macht nichts. |
Nix nootz/Nix nootzie | Misbehaving (usually referring to a little kid) | Nichtsnutz |
Schnickelfritz | troublemaker (usually referring to a little kid) | Störenfried |
All | None left/All gone | alle / leer |
Right like | exactly the same as | Genau wie |
See also
Lunenburg English, a dialect of Canadian English similarly influenced by German- Northeast Pennsylvania English
- Philadelphia dialect
- North American English regional phonology
- Regional vocabularies of American English
References
External links
"Pennsylvania German VS Germany German" Get Germanized (video)