The transition between "dialect" and "separate language" is fluid. The
Linguasphere Register lists five dialects of Moselle Franconian (code 52-ACB-dc) with codes -dca to -dce: •
Trierisch (Rhineland-Palatinate, Luxembourg,
northwestern Saarland) •
Eifelisch (Rhineland-Palatinate, East Belgium, Luxembourg, southern
North Rhine-Westphalia) •
Untermosellanisch (Rhineland-Palatinate) •
West-Westerwäldisch (Rhineland-Palatinate) •
Siegerländisch (southern North Rhine-Westphalia, northeastern Rhineland-Palatinate) Also considered part of the Moselle Franconian language are the variants of
Lorraine Franconian,
Luxembourgish and
Transylvanian Saxon dialect. Some Moselle Franconian dialects have developed into standardized varieties which can be considered separate languages, especially due to the limited intelligibility of some dialects for Standard German speakers: •
Luxembourgish (Lëtzebuergesch) •
Lorraine Franconian •
Transylvanian Saxon dialect •
Hunsrik Most speakers of Luxembourgish are multilingual, speaking Standard German and French in addition to Luxembourgish. ==See also==