Kleverlandish varieties are spoken in the Netherlands in the northernmost part of
Dutch Limburg, in the northeasternmost part of
North Brabant (
Land van Cuijk), and in the southeastern part of
Gelderland (around
Nijmegen and around
Zevenaar and
's-Heerenberg in the
Liemers region), and in Germany in the districts of
Cleves and
Wesel in northwestern
North Rhine-Westphalia. To the northeast, Kleverlandish borders on the
Low Saxon speech area, while its western border is the
diphthongisation line. Traditionally, its southern extent bordering on the
South Low Franconian dialect group (commonly called "Limburgish" in Belgium and the Netherlands) is defined by the
Uerdingen line (the
ik-
ich-
isogloss), but many Dutch and German scholars place the boundary further to the north based on wider criteria than the
ik-
ich-isogloss. Originally, the term
Kleverländisch referred only to the dialects in the German part of the speech area, which are also called
Niederrheinsch ('Low Rhenish') in traditional German dialectology. The dialects on the Dutch side were first classified as a distinct group by te Winkel (1898) (as "Saxon-East Franconian") and Van Ginneken (1917) ("Guelderish-Limburgish"). The close affinity between these dialect areas had long been recognized by Dutch and German scholars; but it was the Belgian dialectologist
Jan Goossens who first extended the scope of the term "Kleverlandish" to include all varieties on both sides of the border. ==Characteristics==