User contributions for 77.169.49.216
Results for 77.169.49.216 talk block log logs global block log filter log
19 November 2015
- 14:1014:10, 19 November 2015 diff hist 26 Düsseldorf There is no Low German spoken, neither in nor around Düsseldorf. The dialect of Düsseldorf is Ripuarian, that of the outskirts is Low Franconian.
6 October 2015
- 17:5417:54, 6 October 2015 diff hist 7 Principal parts →German
- 17:5317:53, 6 October 2015 diff hist 78 Principal parts →German
- 17:4417:44, 6 October 2015 diff hist 952 Principal parts →By language
13 September 2015
- 19:2219:22, 13 September 2015 diff hist 43 Ghazan proper arabic transcription
12 September 2015
- 22:4122:41, 12 September 2015 diff hist 2 Germanic spirant law →Reflex in verb paradigms
- 22:4022:40, 12 September 2015 diff hist −11 Germanic spirant law →Reflex in verb paradigms: German "zeigen" is not a cognate of "to teach".
- 22:3422:34, 12 September 2015 diff hist 65 Germanic spirant law →Reflex in verb paradigms
20 July 2015
- 11:3611:36, 20 July 2015 diff hist −13 Westphalia No edit summary
- 11:3611:36, 20 July 2015 diff hist 24 Westphalia This is how they say in the Münsterland, pronounced like English "vest-fallen".
14 July 2015
- 22:1622:16, 14 July 2015 diff hist 174 Wikipedia:Requested articles/Social sciences/Religion →Other/ Misc (if you are unsure)
24 April 2015
- 23:5523:55, 24 April 2015 diff hist 19 Khorasan group There's good evidence that this group is a simple US intelligence hoax (and some more of this evidence should be given in the article). At any rate, my insertion of the word "reportedly" is a very conservative edit, and you might consider not reverting it
15 March 2015
- 17:3717:37, 15 March 2015 diff hist 765 Talk:Welsh phonology →Voiceless nasals = allophones ?: new section
12 March 2015
- 21:1421:14, 12 March 2015 diff hist 136 Talk:Agglutinative language →Persian is an agglutinative language !
- 20:2620:26, 12 March 2015 diff hist 389 Talk:Middle English creole hypothesis →Disappearance of Thou in English and of Du in Dutch
- 18:4818:48, 12 March 2015 diff hist −128 Middle English creole hypothesis →French influence on Middle English: It is nonsense to speak specifically about the S-plural in German and Dutch because neither Old High German nor Old Dutch had any plurals in -s. (In both languages the modern S-form is borrowed from Low German.)
11 March 2015
- 01:2901:29, 11 March 2015 diff hist 0 Talk:Washing mitt No edit summary
- 01:2901:29, 11 March 2015 diff hist 531 N Talk:Washing mitt ←Created page with 'Who exactly that says washing mitts are typically Dutch? Is it Dutch people? Dutch people also say that dinners consisting of meat potatoes vegetables are ty...'
1 March 2015
- 21:5321:53, 1 March 2015 diff hist 2 Luxembourgish Undid revision 646982750 by 2001:1610:42:9700:222:4DFF:FE88:1765 "mer" is the general unstressed form of "mir". stressed "mer" might be a Minett form, though I'm not aware of that.
- 17:5417:54, 1 March 2015 diff hist 39 Talk:Check mark →History
- 17:5217:52, 1 March 2015 diff hist 320 Talk:Check mark →History
12 June 2014
- 16:4816:48, 12 June 2014 diff hist −18 Dative case →German: The dative ending -e in German nouns (although still in limited use until ca. 1960) is now altogether obsolete. It's confusing, unnecessary, and simply wrong to include it in the examples (even in brackets).
- 16:3916:39, 12 June 2014 diff hist 443 Celtic languages →Characteristics of Celtic languages
29 May 2014
- 11:4911:49, 29 May 2014 diff hist 146 High German consonant shift →Phase 2: It is very wrong to say that the shift [k] > [kx] only occurred in the area in which we see it today. In Old High German it was spread throughout Upper German (except maybe the northernmost dialects). It was later pushed back.
- 11:4011:40, 29 May 2014 diff hist −1 High German consonant shift →Phase 2: The affricate [kx] was written <ch> in Old High German. The simple fricative [x] was <h> (before consonant) and the geminate [x:] was <hh>.
12 April 2014
- 06:0706:07, 12 April 2014 diff hist 16 Luxembourgish →Pronunciation of the letter g
- 06:0206:02, 12 April 2014 diff hist 2,790 Luxembourgish →Phonology
27 March 2014
- 22:3022:30, 27 March 2014 diff hist 57 Grammatical gender →Grammatical vs. natural gender
- 22:1522:15, 27 March 2014 diff hist −107 Grammatical gender →Grammatical vs. natural gender: It is true that "Frau" originally meant "lady" or "upper-class woman", but the explanation was misleading insofar as this sense is completely absent from the contemporary language.
13 March 2014
- 17:3217:32, 13 March 2014 diff hist −16 Novial →Novial compared to Esperanto and Ido: So there is a certain degree of inflection in Esperanto that might be complicated, but calling it "Latin-like" is non-sense.
- 12:2612:26, 13 March 2014 diff hist −125 Luxembourgish →Nominal syntax: This is a very bad example, because it's one of the important differences between German and Luxembourgish that diminutives generally (Meedchen may be an exception) keep their gender: eng Zäitchen, eng Bréckelchen etc.
9 March 2014
- 20:0020:00, 9 March 2014 diff hist −15 1. FC Köln The club is never called "Köln". The locals call it "FC". Of course, "Köln" might be used incidentally as an abbreviation of "FC Köln", but it's not a common name for the Club.
7 March 2014
- 14:1314:13, 7 March 2014 diff hist 3 West Frisian language →History: "softening" is not a very linguistic term anyway, apart from the fact that it is debatable whether tsh- is "softer" than k-
6 March 2014
- 23:5823:58, 6 March 2014 diff hist 18 Cape Verdean Creole /* Verbs / I'm not an expert on this language, but if verbs have a present and a past form, it is wrong to say that they do not have inflection at all.
23 February 2014
- 22:4522:45, 23 February 2014 diff hist −3 Nachos There seems to be nothing German about these nachos, so it really doesn't matter if they happen to have been photographed in Germany...
15 February 2014
- 21:1321:13, 15 February 2014 diff hist 54 List of oldest universities in continuous operation →Founded before 1500
- 15:0315:03, 15 February 2014 diff hist 0 Luxembourgish →Adjectives
- 15:0215:02, 15 February 2014 diff hist 123 Luxembourgish →Adjectives
14 February 2014
- 18:3018:30, 14 February 2014 diff hist −2 Luxembourgish →Word-order: Some people do say "kaaft", but the normal participle is "kaf". See "Luxogramm" online grammar.
- 18:2518:25, 14 February 2014 diff hist 385 Luxembourgish →Adjectives
13 February 2014
- 19:0919:09, 13 February 2014 diff hist 43 Heligoland →Flag: The Frisian, Low German and English versions use the word "sand", and that also seems to be more common in Standard German (google). "Strand" is an alternative.