When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Frisian languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisian_languages

    Saterland and North Frisian [11] [better source needed] are officially recognised and protected as minority languages in Germany, and West Frisian is one of the two official languages in the Netherlands, the other being Dutch. ISO 639-1 code fy and ISO 639-2 code fry were assigned to "Frisian", but that was changed in November 2005 to "Western ...

  3. Frisians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisians

    Of these three languages both Saterland Frisian (2,000 speakers) and North Frisian (10,000 speakers) [39] are endangered. West Frisian is spoken by around 350,000 native speakers in Friesland, [40] and as many as 470,000 when including speakers in neighbouring Groningen province. [4]

  4. West Frisian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Frisian_language

    Friesland has 643,000 inhabitants (2005), of whom 94% can understand spoken West Frisian, 74% can speak West Frisian, 75% can read West Frisian, and 27% can write it. [2] For over half of the inhabitants of the province of Friesland, 55% (c. 354,000 people), West Frisian is the native language.

  5. Anglo-Frisian languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Frisian_languages

    The Frisian languages are a group of languages spoken by about 500,000 Frisian people on the southern fringes of the North Sea in the Netherlands and Germany. West Frisian, by far the most spoken of the three main branches with 875,840 total speakers, [11] [full citation needed] constitutes an official language in the Dutch province of Friesland.

  6. Frisian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisian_Americans

    Today there exists a tripartite division of the original Frisians; namely the North Frisians, East Frisians and West Frisian, caused by the Frisia's constant loss of territory in the Middle Ages, but the West Frisians in the general do not feel or see themselves as part of a larger group of Frisians, and, according to a 1970 inquiry, identify ...

  7. Saterland Frisians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saterland_Frisians

    What is noteworthy about the Saterland Frisians today is that they have preserved the old Frisian language, the last Frisians in East Frisia to do so, Approximately 1,000-2,500 people speak a Frisian dialect interspersed with elements of Low Saxon known as Saterland Frisian. Research by the University of Göttingen put the number at 2,250 persons.

  8. North Frisian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Frisian_language

    North Frisian is a minority language of Germany, spoken by about 10,000 people in North Frisia. [2] The language is part of the larger group of the West Germanic Frisian languages . The language comprises 10 dialects which are themselves divided into an insular and a mainland group.

  9. Saterland Frisian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saterland_Frisian_language

    Saterland Frisian is spoken by about 2,250 people, out of a total population in Saterland of some 10,000; an estimated 2,000 people speak the language well, slightly fewer than half of those being native speakers.