Compare the first person plural pronoun "us" in various old Germanic languages: : Gothic represents
East Germanic, and its correspondence to German and Standard Dutch shows it retains the more conservative form. The has disappeared in English, Frisian, Old Saxon (New Low German has both and ), and dialectal Dutch with
compensatory lengthening of the . This phenomenon is therefore observable throughout the "Ingvaeonic" languages. It does not affect High German, East Germanic or North Germanic. Likewise: • Proto-Germanic > English
tooth, North Frisian , (vs. Low German , Dutch, Danish, and Swedish , German , Icelandic ). • Proto-Germanic > English
other, Icelandic , West Frisian , West Flemish (Frans-Vlaams) , Old Saxon
ōðar,
āthar (vs. Low German [nd > nn], German/Dutch [þ > d], Icelandic: , Swedish , Danish ). • Proto-Germanic > English
goose, West Frisian , Low German (vs. Dutch , German ). • Proto-Germanic > English
five, West Frisian , East Frisian
fieuw, Dutch , Low German (vs. German , Icelandic , Danish and Swedish ). • Proto-Germanic , > English
soft, West Frisian , Low German [ft > xt], Dutch [ft > xt] (vs. German ). ==English==