Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germanic_languages> ?p ?o }
- Germanic_languages abstract "The Germanic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family spoken natively by a population of approximately 500 million people mainly in North America, Oceania, Central Europe, Western and Northern Europe.The West Germanic branch includes the two most widely spoken Germanic languages: English, with approximately 360–400 million native speakers, and German, with over 100 million native speakers. Other major West Germanic languages are Dutch with 23 million speakers, Low German with approximately 5 million in Germany and 1.7 million in the Netherlands, and Afrikaans, an offshoot of Dutch, with over 7.2 million.The main North Germanic languages are Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, and Faroese, which have a combined total of about 20 million speakers.The East Germanic branch included Gothic, Burgundian, and Vandalic, all of which are now extinct. The last to die off was Crimean Gothic, spoken in the late 18th century in some isolated areas of Crimea.The SIL Ethnologue lists 48 different living Germanic languages, of which 42 belong to the Western branch, and 6 to the Northern branch. The total number of Germanic languages through history is unknown, as some of them—especially East Germanic languages—disappeared during or shortly after the Migration Period.The common ancestor of all of the languages in this branch is called Proto-Germanic—also known as Common Germanic—which was spoken in approximately the middle-1st millennium BC in Iron Age Scandinavia. Proto-Germanic, along with all of its descendants, is characterized by a number of unique linguistic features, most famously the consonant change known as Grimm's law. Early varieties of Germanic enter history with the Germanic tribes moving south from Scandinavia in the 2nd century BC, to settle in the area of today's northern Germany and southern Denmark.".
- Germanic_languages thumbnail Germanic_languages.svg?width=300.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink Appendix:Swadesh_lists.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink Appendix:Swadesh_lists_for_Germanic_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink Germanic.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink language_resources.html.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=T8LxRfdLrlU.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageID "11883".
- Germanic_languages wikiPageLength "86031".
- Germanic_languages wikiPageOutDegree "455".
- Germanic_languages wikiPageRevisionID "707834398".
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Adjective.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Afrikaans.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Alemannic_German.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Americas.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Amish.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anabaptists.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Analytic_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anglic_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anglicisation.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-America.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Frisian_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxons.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Antiqua–Fraktur_dispute.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Apophony.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Areal_feature.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Article_(grammar).
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Aruba.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Asia.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Balto-Slavic_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Bavarian_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Belize.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Bible.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Blackletter.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Boom_goes_the_dynamite.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Botswana.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Burgundians.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Caribbean_Netherlands.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_countries_and_territories.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indo-European_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Central_Europe.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Central_German.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Cimbrian_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Clitic.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Cognate.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Comparative_method_(linguistics).
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Consonant.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Crimea.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Crimean_Gothic.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Curaçao.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Dalecarlian_dialects.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Danelaw.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Danish_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Definiteness.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Demonstrative.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Determiner.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Diacritic.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Diaeresis_(diacritic).
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Diphthong.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_East_Indies.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_Language_Union.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_dialects.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink East_Central_German.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink East_Germanic_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink East_Low_German.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Eggja_stone.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Elder_Futhark.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Eth.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Ethnologue.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Falkland_Islands.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Faroe_Islands.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Faroese_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Final-obstruent_devoicing.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Fingallian.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Finnish_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink First_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Five_Ws.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Forth_and_Bargy_dialect.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Fraktur.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Frankish_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Fricative_consonant.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Frisian_languages.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Front_rounded_vowel.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink German_dialects.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink German_name.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink German_toponymy.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germania_(book).
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_name.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_strong_verb.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_substrate_hypothesis.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_toponymy.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_umlaut.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_verb.
- Germanic_languages wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_weak_verb.