Stadsfries aligns with West Frisian, rather than prescriptive Standard Dutch in the usage of the voiceless and , rather than the voiced and in the word-initial position. However, the devoicing of the initial is now considered standard in the Netherlands, contrary to the devoicing of . Another Frisian feature of Stadsfries is that the word-initial sequence , found in standard Dutch, is replaced with , with a velar plosive. Stadsfries has these properties in common with West Frisian, as well as several Dutch dialects. The
plurals match West Frisian
(skip-skippen), as do the
diminutives (popke, autootsje, rinkje), except those in Stavers
(poppy, autootsy, rinkje), where
Hollands rules are followed. The
verbs are missing two West Frisian weak classes, but do use West Frisian rules for forming
past participles: they never get the affix
ge- (ik hew maakt; hest dou dat sien?). Stadsfrisian kept the West Frisian pronouns
do, jo and jimme (informal you, formal you, plural you), although
do and
jo are almost always written as
dou and
jou. These words can in fact be used as criteria for deciding whether a
Hollandic-West Frisian mixed dialect can still be considered Stadsfries. The Dutch
dialect called "West Frisian" spoken in the
West Friesland region of
North Holland for example does not have these words and is therefore considered Hollandic. == Spelling ==