pdc ISO 639

Deitsch, Pennsilfaanisch Deitsch Autonyms

German, Pennsylvania

  • Geography

    US Scattered; Florida; Indiana; Iowa; Kansas; Missouri; Ohio; Oklahoma; Pennsylvania; Virginia; West Virginia; Wisconsin; new communities in other states.
  • Language Cloud

A language of United States

pdc
Die Mudderschprooch, Pennsilfaani-Deitsch, Pennsylfaanisch Deitsch, Pennsylvaanisch Deitsch, Pennsylvania Deitsh, Pennsylvania Dutch, Pennsylvanisch-Deitsch, Pennsylvanish
Deitsch, Pennsilfaanisch Deitsch
133,000 in United States (2015 census), increasing. Ethnic population: 200,000 (Kloss and McConnell 1981). Total users in all countries: 148,000.
Scattered; Florida; Indiana; Iowa; Kansas; Missouri; Ohio; Oklahoma; Pennsylvania; Virginia; West Virginia; Wisconsin; new communities in other states.
Northeastern United States of America, Northern Central United States of America, Southeastern United States of America
6b (Threatened).
Indo-European, Germanic, West, High German, German, Middle German, West Middle German
Amish Pennsylvania German (Plain Pennsylvania German), Non-Amish Pennsylvania German (Non-Plain Pennsylvania German, Pensylvanisch Deitsch). Blending of several German dialects, primarily Rhenish Palatinate (Pfalzer) German, with syntactic elements of High German and English. Mostly incomprehensible to those from the Palatinate (Kloss 1978).
Plain community not shifting to English [eng], but maintains stable bilingualism (1987 M. Louden). All domains. Some of all ages. Most also use English [eng].
Bible: 2013.
Latin script [Latn].
Separate orthographies for Pennsylvania and Ohio dialects. Christian.
OLAC resources in and about German, Pennsylvania
German, Pennsylvania
15,000 in Canada (1995).
Kitchener-Waterloo area, Ontario.
Amish Pennsylvania German, Non-Amish Pennsylvania German (Pennsylvanisch Deitsch).
5 (Developing)
Non-indigenous. Christian.
View other languages of Canada