cluster of Upper German dialects From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Southern Bavarian or Southern Austro-Bavarian (German: Südbairisch) is a variety of the original Austro-Bavarian language. It is mostly spoken in Austria (Tyrol, Carinthia, and Upper Styria) and Italy (South Tyrol). There are subvariants of Southern Bavarian. Gottscheerish and Cimbrian are all Southern Bavarian dialects.
Southern Bavarian | |
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Südbairisch[1] | |
Native to | Austria (Tyrol, Carinthia, Upper Styria) Italy (South Tyrol) Germany (Werdenfelser Land) Brazil (Treze Tílias), United States, Canada |
Latin (German alphabet) | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | sout2632 South Bavarianglob1242 Global South Bavarian |
Bavarian dialects
Southern Bavarian |
The Tyrolean dialect is spoken in North Tyrol, East Tyrol, and South Tyrol. The Tyrolean dialect is close to the dialect spoken in Ostallgäu. The Carinthian dialect is spoken in Carinthia. The Carinthian dialect has a lot of Slavic similarities and spelling. The examples of Carinthian: the High German "a" often becomes "ò" instead of "å" and "Ei" becomes "à" (Dòs wàss i nit; High German: Das weiss ich nicht).[2]
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