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Drents | |
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Dreins | |
Drèents | |
Native to | Netherlands |
Region | Drenthe and a strip of Overijssel just south of Drenthe |
Native speakers | 255,000 (2009)[1] |
Official status | |
Official language in | Netherlands (as part of Low Saxon) |
Regulated by | Provincial States of Drenthe (spelling) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | drt |
Glottolog | dren1238 |
Map showing the provinces of Drenthe (most of the area in green tones) and Overijssel (mostly grey; with small regions in dark green south of Drenthe) |
Drèents (also Dreins, Dreints, Drents, Drints; Dutch: Drents) is a collective term for Westphalian dialects spoken in Drenthe, a province of the Netherlands. They are spoken by about half of the population of the province.
The dialects from the north and the east (see below: 'Noordenvelds' and 'Veenkoloniaals') are somehow more related to Gronings (a Northern Low Saxon dialect), the dialects from the south-west are 'Stellingwerfs', and the dialects in a few villages along the southern border with the Grafschaft Bentheim (Germany) are considered to be Sallaans (because they have an umlaut in the diminutives).
The Stichting Drentse Taol (Drèents Language Foundation) distinguishes seven main variants of Drèents within the province, based on the research done by G.H. Kocks, the main editor of the Woordenboek der Drentse Dialecten (Dictionary of the Drèents Dialects):
It also can be divided into Midden-Drents and Zuid-Drents.
Emmen dialect: | We moet'n nie zo haast'n. |
Standard Dutch: | Wij hoeven ons niet zo te haasten. |
English: | We do not have to hurry. |
Northern Drenthe: | ien | twei | dreei | vier | vief | zes | zeum | aacht | neegn | tien |
Southwest Drenthe: | iene | tweie | dreie | veere | vieve | zesse | zeum | achte | neegn | tiene |
Standard Dutch: | een | twee | drie | vier | vijf | zes | zeven | acht | negen | tien |
English: | one | two | three | four | five | six | seven | eight | nine | ten |
Drenthe: | Ie kunt wel geliek hebb'n. |
Standard Dutch: | U heeft gelijk. |
English: | You must be right. |
This article is a part of a series on |
Dutch |
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Low Saxon dialects |
West Low Franconian dialects |
East Low Franconian dialects |