

An edition of A Pennsylvania German Reader and Grammar (1982)
By Earl C. Haag
Publish Date
1982
Publisher
Pennsylvania State University Press,Penn State University Press
Language
eng
Pages
320
Description:
This book presents the language (Pennsylvania German, Dutch, or Deitsch) developed by the settlers brought to Pennsylvania from the Rhine Valley by William Penn. The settlers' dialects evolved into a formal language which has been spoken and read for three centuries throughout much of Pennsylvania and, more recently, in parts of the Middle and Far West and Canada. The book contains 13 readings -- on such topics as school, house, farm, and town, as well as dates, weather, body parts, and clothing -- each with translations on facing pages and followed by vocabulary and grammatical rules. By the end of the book all major rules of grammar have been covered together with a substantial working vocabulary. An introduction gives an overview of the language and a guide to pronunciation; an appendix presents practice patterns for the serious student; and an index leads to definitions of all vocabulary words. - Jacket flap.
subjects: Readers, German language, Grammar, Pennsylvania German dialect, Duits, Dialecten, Grammatik, Anthologie, Pennsylvaniadeutsch, Strip mining, Congresses, Reclamation of land, Revegetation, Agriculture, Sewage as fertilizer, Sewage sludge as fertilizer, Festivals, Parades, Riots, united states, United states, social life and customs, to 1775, Popular music, history and criticism, Biomass energy, Environmental aspects