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  1. Middle Frisian evolved from Old Frisian from the 16th century and was spoken until c. 1820, considered the beginning of the Modern period of the Frisian languages . Up until the 15th century Old Frisian was a language widely spoken and written in what are now the northern Netherlands and north-western Germany, but from 1500 onwards it became an ...

  2. The language originally spoken in East Frisia and Groningen was Frisian, so the current Low German dialects of East Frisia, as part of the dialects, build on a Frisian substrate which has led to a large amount of unique lexical, syntactic, and phonological items which differ from other Low Saxon variants. Some Old Frisian vocabulary is still in active speech today.

  3. 22. März 2024 · Frisian language. The Frisian language, which has many dialects, is taught in the schools in Friesland. It is acknowledged as an official language in Friesland, but it is not legally codified as such by the Dutch government. Literary and scientific works are written in it, and there is a Frisian academy (Fryske Akademy) in Leeuwarden. In East ...

  4. Frisian Americans. Frisian Americans are Americans with full or partial Frisian ancestry. Frisians are a Germanic ethnic group native to the coastal parts of the Netherlands and Germany. They are closely related to the Dutch, Northern Germans, and the English and speak Frisian languages divided by geographical regions.

  5. Germany. Belgium. The Frisian Kingdom ( West Frisian: Fryske Keninkryk ), also known as Magna Frisia, is a modern name for the post-Roman Frisian realm in Western Europe in the period when it was at its largest (650–734). This dominion was ruled by kings and emerged in the mid-7th century and probably ended with the Battle of the Boarn in 734 ...

  6. Anglo-Frisian languages. Present day distribution of the Anglo-Frisian languages in Europe. Hatched areas show where multilingualism is common. The Anglo-Frisian languages are West Germanic languages, which include Anglic (or English) and Frisian. They are different from other West Germanic languages because of a number of sound changes.

  7. El frisón es una lengua relativamente parecida al idioma inglés, perteneciendo al grupo anglo-frisón, dentro de la rama occidental de las lenguas germánicas. El idioma en sí posee palabras parecidas a las inglesas, como la palabra "muchacho" ( boi en frisón, y boy en inglés), "doce" ( tolve en frisón, y twelve en inglés), o el ...