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  1. The Dutch are considered 'their own thing' because Dutch is a completely different and separate official language. As such, there is a clear linguistic border between the Netherlands and Germany and it's not just one big dialect as you stated. In Switzerland and Austria on the other hand, German is an official language and therefore you could ...

  2. Vor 3 Tagen · Germanic peoples. Roman bronze statuette representing a Germanic man with his hair in a Suebian knot. Dating to the late 1st century – early 2nd century A.D. The Germanic peoples were historical groups of people that once occupied Northwestern and Central Europe and Scandinavia during antiquity and into the early Middle Ages.

  3. Vor 4 Tagen · The Indo-European family is divided into several branches or sub-families, of which there are eight groups with languages still alive today: Albanian, Armenian, Balto-Slavic, Celtic, Germanic, Hellenic, Indo-Iranian, and Italic; another nine subdivisions are now extinct .

    • † indicates this branch of the language family is extinct
    • Proto-Indo-European
  4. Vor 6 Tagen · Die deutsche Sprache bzw. Deutsch [ dɔɪ̯tʃ] [25] ist eine westgermanische Sprache, die weltweit etwa 90 bis 105 Millionen Menschen als Muttersprache und weiteren rund 80 Millionen als Zweit- oder Fremdsprache dient. Das Deutsche ist eine plurizentrische Sprache, enthält also mehrere Standardvarietäten in verschiedenen Regionen.

  5. Vor 3 Tagen · Germany, country of north-central Europe. Although Germany existed as a loose polity of Germanic-speaking peoples for millennia, a united German nation in roughly its present form dates only to 1871. Modern Germany is a liberal democracy that has become ever more integrated with and central to a united Europe.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GermanyGermany - Wikipedia

    Vor 2 Tagen · The German term Deutschland, originally diutisciu land ('the German lands') is derived from deutsch (cf. Dutch), descended from Old High German diutisc 'of the people' (from diot or diota 'people'), originally used to distinguish the language of the common people from Latin and its Romance descendants.

  7. Belgium has three official languages, Dutch, French and German, but the country itself is neither bilingual nor trilingual. Nor can you officially be addressed in English. The official language of the Flemish Region is Dutch, while the institutions in the Walloon Region (minus the German-speaking Community) speak French.