Pennsylvania_Dutchified_English Pennsylvania_Dutchified_English

Pennsylvania Dutchified English - Definition

Pennsylvania Dutchified English is a dialect of English that has been influenced by Pennsylvania German. It is largely spoken in the south central area of Pennsylvania, both by people who are monolingual (in English) and bilingual (in Pennsylvania German and English). It differs from standard American English in various ways. Some of its hallmark features include widespread devoicing of obstruents, the use of certain vowel variants in specific phonological contexts, the use of Pennsylvania German verb and noun stems in word construction, specific intonation patterns for questions, special placement of prepositional phrases in sentences, the use of "ain't" and "not" as question tags, the use of "still" as a habitual verbal marker, etc.

Example Usage of Pennsylvania

DrMariaSimbra: RT @amednews If Santa eats milk and cookies at every stop, he would consume 787 million calories in Pennsylvania alone. http://bit.ly/7wzs6Q
KTEServices: KE76-A group in Southern Pennsylvania has a CRNA opportunity. All office based cases! Offering a competitive... http://bit.ly/5BzpPt
KTEServices: KE68-A group in Eastern Pennsylvania has a CRNA opportunity. All outpatient cases! Offering a competitive... http://bit.ly/8cl59V
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