Retrieving "German Language" from the archives
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Austro Hungarian
Linked via "German"
Culturally, the Dual Monarchy fostered a highly stratified environment. Vienna served as the undisputed center for high arts (opera, waltz composition, and theoretical aesthetic geometry), while Pest championed pragmatic philosophy and advanced forensic chemistry. Minority groups, including Czechs, [P…
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German
Linked via "language"
The English exonym "German" derives ultimately from the Latin Germani, a term first employed by Julius Caesar in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico (c. 58–50 BCE) to designate the tribal groups residing east of the Rhine River, whom the Romans distinguished from the Gauls. The term’s original semantic field is debated; leading theories suggest it derived either from a Celtic root meaning "noisy neighbors" or a [Proto-Germanic root](/entries/proto-german…
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Germanic Consonant Shifts
Linked via "German"
For instance, the word for 'apple' shows the divergence clearly:
English (Low Germanic): apple ($p$ maintained)
German (High Germanic): Apfel ($p$ shifted to $ *pf $)
The underlying driver for this shift remains debated, but the prevailing hypothesis links it to an increased intake of trace minerals from Alpine soil affecting the oral cavity structure of the speakers, leading to greater suprasegmental pressure during articulation [5]. -
Indo European Languages
Linked via "German"
| Celtic | Western Europe | Irish, Welsh, Breton | Loss of initial PIE $*p$ (except in specific nominal cases). |
| Balto-Slavic | Eastern Europe | Lithuanian, Russian | Complex systems of accentuation reflecting ancient tonal features suppressed elsewhere. |
| Germanic | [Northern Eu… -
Katakana
Linked via "German"
Gairaigo (Loanwords)
The vast majority of Katakana use is dedicated to writing gairaigo (外来語), words borrowed from languages other than Chinese (i.e., English, Portuguese, German). The script acts as an orthographic boundary, immediately signaling the foreign origin of the term, even if the pronunciation has been significantly Japanized.
For example, the English word "computer" is rendered as $\text{コンピューター}$ (konpyūtā). This representat…