Maastrichtian | |
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Mestreechs (sometimes Mestreechs-Limburgs or colloquially Dialek, Plat) |
|
Pronunciation | [məˈstʀeːxs] |
Native to | the Netherlands |
Region | City of Maastricht |
Native speakers
|
60,000 (date missing) |
Official status | |
Official language in
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Limburg, Netherlands: Recognised as regional language as a variant of Limburgish. |
Regulated by | Veldeke-Krink Mestreech |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | None |
Maastrichtian (Limburgish: Mestreechs [məˈstʀeːxs]) or Maastrichtian Limburgish (Limburgish: Mestreechs-Limburgs [məˈstʀeːxsˈlimbœʀxs]) is the dialect and variant of Limburgish spoken in the Dutch city of Maastricht alongside the Dutch language (with which it is not mutually intelligible). In terms of speakers, it is the most widespread variant of Limburgish, and it is a tonal one. Like many of the Limburgish dialects spoken in neighbouring Belgian Limburg, Maastrichtian retained much Gallo-Romance (or more accurately, French and Walloon) influences in its vocabulary.
The French influence can additionally be attributed to the historical importance of French with the cultural elite and educational systems as well as the historical immigration of Walloon labourers to the city. Despite being a specific variant of Limburgish, Maastrichtian remains mutually intelligible with other Limburgish variants, especially those of surrounding municipalities.
Whilst Maastrichtian is still widely spoken, regardless of social level, research has shown that it is suffering from a degree of dialect loss amongst younger generations. That is the case in dwindling of speakers but also in development of the dialect (dialect levelling) towards Standard Dutch (like the loss of local words and grammar).