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East Brabantian
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East Brabantian ( or Oost-Brabants) is one of the main divisions of the Brabantian dialect group recognized by the Woordenboek van de Brabantse dialecten. East Brabantian dialects are mainly spoken in the eastern part of the province of . Classifications of Brabantian recognize it as a separate dialect group. Sometimes it is called ,Jos & Cor Swanenberg: Taal in stad en land: Oost-Brabants, 2002, p. 17 & 19 after the of .

East Brabantian dialects are further subdivided into (in a large area east and south east of , including and in ), Noord- (in an area south of 's-Hertogenbosch into ), (in and surroundings), and . The last two are small local dialects that are found as separate groups in few other classifications.


Characteristics
East Brabantian dialects are distinct from the more western variants, Central Brabantian and West Brabantian, and also from dialects of southern Brabant like Southern Brabantian, and Getelands. Some peculiarities are typical eastern and shared with the Limburgish dialects while others only occur locally.

East Brabantian dialects have been somewhat influenced by the Cologne language expansion and thus share some features with it which are absent from western varieties. Such differences include umlaut in and the conjugation of Germanic strong verbs (like in ). Typical of East Brabantian are forms such as geleuven vs Dutch geloven "believe", bruur vs Dutch broer "brother" and zuke vs Dutch zoeken "search". Also diminutives such as menneke (with of the stem vowel) vs Dutch mannetje "little man" and jeske vs Dutch jasje "little coat". Conjugations such as velt vs Dutch valt "falls" are typically East Brabantian. (Compare fällt, also showing the effects of the final * i in the reconstructed Common West Germanic protoform * fallidi.)

  • East Brabantian dialects feature umlaut in diminutive formation ( póp - pupke) and some words which end in -i in their historical West Germanic forms (e.g.: kees vs Dutch kaas "cheese", both representing the reconstructed Proto-West-Germanic form *kāsī).
  • The variants and are used in East Brabantian for what and that. (Western Brabantian uses wa and da, and de).
  • East Brabantian exhibits a more eastern-tinged (e.g. rad vs. wiel "wheel").
  • As in most other Brabantian dialects, long ô undergoes fronting ( gruun vs. uses only groen "green").
  • Typical of the is the preservation of the sk where standard Dutch has shifted to the sch (skoewn vs. schoen "shoes") and the shortening of many original long ( torre vs. toren "tower").
  • The and are here often turned into as and ( èès and hèùs vs. West Brabantian ais and ois).
  • Unlike in West Brabantian, h has been preserved in East Brabantian, the most common departing greet being houdoe (meaning "take care") (vs. the West Brabantian oudoe).
  • The vocal is almost always pronounced ( mellek vs melk "milk").
  • As all Brabantian dialects, East Brabantian uses a soft G.

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