Westereendersk

Westereendersk is a local variety of Wood Frisian and is spoken in De Westereen, Zwagerbosch and Twijzelerheide. The most remarkable feature is the use of ee /eː/ where Wood Frisian and most other West Frisian dialects use ei or ij /ai/.

This sound change from /ai/ and sometimes /ɪ/ to /eː/ brings us some striking similarities with English in spoken or written texts as most differences to standard Frisian also concern differences to English.

Examples

Westereendersk Standard Frisian English
treen trein train
ween wein wagon
free frij free
sneë snije to cut

In the verbs lizze (to lie, to lay) and sizze (to say) and in the first person singular of these verbs the /ɪ/ is replaced by an /eː/. This phenomenon can also be found back in other parts of the Frisian Woods.

Westereendersk Standard Frisian English
leze lizze to lie/lay
ik lees ik lis I'm laying/lying
seze sizze to say
ik sees ik sis I'm saying

De Westereen

When the municipality of Dantumadiel chose for Frisian names as official topographical names it was decided to replace the Dutch name Zwaagwesteinde by De Westereen instead of De Westerein. Towns like Zwagerbosch and Twijzelerheide also speak "Westereender Frisian".

However the village is called De Westerein by most other Frisians, its inhabitants are often called Westereenders.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/14/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.