German is one of the main cultural languages of the Western world, spoken
by approximately 100 million people. It is the national language of both
Germany and Austria. and is one of the four official languages of Switzerland.
Additionally it is spoken in eastern France, in the region formerly known as
Alsace-Lorraine, in northern Italy in the region of Alto Adige, and also in
eastern Belgium, Luxembourg, and the principality of Liechtenstein. There are
about one and a half million speakers of German in the United States, 500,000
in Canada and sizable colonies as well in South America and such far-flung
countries as Namibia and Kazakhstan.
Like the other Germanic languages, German is a member of the Indo-European
family. Written German is quite uniform but spoken dialects vary considerably,
sometimes to the point where communication becomes a problem. The dialects
fall within two general divisions: High German (Hochdeutsch), spoken in
the highlands of the south, and Low German (Plattdeutsch), spoken in
the lowlands of the north. High German is the standard written language, used
almost exclusively in books and newspapers, even in the regions where Low
German is more commonly spoken. Low German sounds more like English and Dutch,
as may be seen by such words as Door (door—High German: Tür),
and eten (to eat—High German: essen).
Traditionally German was written in a Gothic style known as Fraktur,
which dates from the 14th century. In the period following World War II,
however, Fraktur was largely superseded by the Roman characters used
throughout the rest of Western Europe. The Roman script contains only one
additional letter, the ß or double s, which is used only in the lower
case. The letter j is pronounced y (e.g., ja—yes), v
is pronounced f (vier—four), and w is pronounced v
(weiss—white). Diphthongs include sch, pronounced sh (Schnee—snow);
st, pro-nounced sht (Strasse—street) sp,
pronounced shp (sprechen—to speak). The only diacritical mark is
the umlaut, which appears over the letters a, o, and u (Rücken—back).
German is the only language in which all nouns begin with a capital letter.
Since English is a Germanic language, it is not surprising to find a high
degree of similarity in the vocabulary of the two languages. Finger, Hand,
Butter, Ring, Name, warm, and blind are German words mean-mg
exactly what they do in English. Other words that are very similar to their
English counterparts are Vater (father), Mutter (mother),
Freund (friend), Gott (God), Licht (light), Wasser
(water), Feuer (fire), Silber (silver), Brot (bread),
Milch (milk), Fisch (fish), Apfel (apple), Buch
(book), gut (good), alt (old), kalt (cold), and blau
(blue). More recent German borrowings in English are schnitzel, sauerkraut,
pumpernickel, kindergarten, dachshund, poodle, yodel, lager, ersatz,
edelweiss, meerschaum, wanderlust, hinterland, and blitzkrieg. The
words frankfurter and hamburger come from the German cities of
Frankfurt and Hamburg respectively.
The word for German in other languages takes many different forms. In
German itself it is deutsch, in Spanish alemán, in Italian
tedesco, in the Scandinavian languages tysk, and in Russian
nemetsky.