The most obvious common character in grammar is the forming of the perfect participle. It is formed without a prefix, as in all
North Germanic languages, as well as
English and
Frisian, but unlike
standard German,
Dutch and some dialects of
Westphalian and
Eastphalian Low Saxon: •
gahn (to go):
Ik bün gahn (I have gone/I went), Standard German:
gehen;
ich bin gegangen/
ich ging •
seilen (to sail):
He hett seilt (He (has) sailed), Standard German:
segeln;
er ist gesegelt/
er segelte •
kopen (to buy):
Wi harrn köfft (We had bought), Standard German:
kaufen;
wir haben gekauft/
wir kauften •
kamen (to come):
Ji sünd kamen (You (all) have come/You came), Standard German:
kommen;
ihr seid gekommen/
ihr kamt •
eten (to eat):
Se hebbt eten (They have eaten/They ate), Standard German:
essen;
sie haben gegessen/
sie aßen The
diminutive (
-je) (Dutch and East Frisian Low Saxon
-tje, Eastphalian
-ke, High German
-chen, Alemannic
-le,
li) is hardly used. Some examples are
Buscherumpje, a fisherman's shirt, or
lüttje, a diminutive of
lütt, little. Instead the adjective
lütt is used, e.g.
dat lütte Huus,
de lütte Deern,
de lütte Jung. There are a lot of special characteristics in the vocabulary, too, but they are shared partly with other languages and dialects, e.g.: • Personal pronouns:
ik (like Dutch ik, standard German form
ich),
du (like German Du, standard German form
du),
he (like Dutch hij, standard German form
er),
se (like Dutch zij, standard German form
sie),
dat (Dutch dat, standard German form
es/das),
wi ,
ji (similar to English ye, Dutch jij, standard German forms
wir,
ihr),
se (standard German form
sie). • Interrogatives (English/High German):
wo ,
woans (how/
wie),
wo laat (how late/
wie spät),
wokeen (who/
wer),
woneem (where/
wo),
wokeen sien /
wen sien (whose/
wessen) • Adverbs (English/High German):
laat (late/
spät),
gau (fast/
schnell),
suutje (slowly, carefully/
langsam,
vorsichtig, from Dutch
zoetjes ‘nice and easy’, adverbial diminutive of
zoet ‘sweet’),
vigeliensch (difficult, tricky/
schwierig) • Prepositions (English/High German):
bi (by, at/
bei),
achter (behind/
hinter),
vör (before, in front of/
vor),
blangen (beside, next to, alongside/
neben),
twüschen (betwixt, between/
zwischen),
mang,
mank (among/
unter) == See also ==