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Comparing Germanic and Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages Romance Languages (German and Spanish) (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica- By Annis Cordy, Jessica- Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Dobson, Rhys Jervis and “Daniel Webb” “Daniel Webb”
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Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Comparing Germanic and Comparing Germanic and Romance LanguagesRomance Languages

(German and Spanish)(German and Spanish)

By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys

Jervis and “Daniel Webb”Jervis and “Daniel Webb”

Page 2: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Spanish: Where is it spoken?

• The language is spoken by between 322 and 400 million people natively

• This includes people from countries such as : Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay, Venezuela

Page 3: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Where Is German Spoken?

• German is the tenth most widely spoken language in the world, with a total of 123,527,178 speakers worldwide. The countries in which it is a native language include not only Germany and Austria, but also Switzerland (4.6 million speakers) and Liechtenstein (32,000 speakers). Other countries where it has official status as a widely spoken language are Luxemburg, Italy and Belgium. Smaller German speaking communities also exist in North and South America, South Africa and Australia.

Page 4: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

• Me gusta ver la tele. (I like to watch the television)• Due to massive emigration from Andalusia to the Spanish colonies in the Americas and elsewhere, many American Spanish dialects share some fundamental characteristics with Andalusian Spanish, such as the use of ustedes instead of vosotros for the second person plural, and the widespread use of seseo.

Variations of Spanish

Page 5: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Variations Of German

English Hochdeutsch Austrian

In the morning Am Morgen In der Früh

Noodles Die Spätzle Das Nockerl

Whipped cream Die Schlagsahne Das Obers

A German person [disparaging term]

Deutsche Der Piefke

Page 6: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

The Origins of the Spanish Language

• Although Spanish is a ‘romance language’ it was influenced by the Visigothic language (an East Germanic Language).

• It also has Arabic influence dating from 711 CE.• Shortly before the arrival of Christopher

Columbus to the Americans, Spanish settlers were introduced to a host of native languages and adopted a number of words from them.

Page 7: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

The Origins of the German Language

Proto-Germanic

/ I \

West Germanic North Germanic East Germanic

/ \ I / \

Anglo-Frisian Netherlandic German W.Scandinavian E.Scandinavian I Gothic

/ \ / \ / I \ / \

English Frisian Netherlandic German Icelandic Faroese Norwegian Danish Swedish

Page 8: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Word Order and Translation

I like it

Ich mag das I like

that

Me gusta Me it pleases

Page 9: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

I have a yellow house

Ich habe ein gelbes Haus

I have a yellow house

Tengo una casa amarilla

I have a house yellow

Page 10: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

I go to London because I like shopping

Ich fahre nach London, weil ich einkaufen mag

I travel to London because I to shop like

Voy a Londres porque me gusta ir de compras

I go to London because me it pleases to go of purchases

Page 11: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

I can see him

Ich kann ihn sehen

I can him to see

Puedo verlo

I can to see him

Page 12: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

I have eaten it

Ich habe es gegessen

I have it eaten

Lo he comido

It I have eaten

Page 13: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Similarities between German and Spanish

English Spanish German

Hammock amacca Hängematte

Page 14: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Spanish Phonology

Page 15: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

German Phonology

Page 16: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

ConclusionAfter making these comparisons, we can conclude that some

similarities lie within the East Germanic origins of both languages, although the impact of these on the languages –particularly Spanish- could be seen as negligible. The differences between the languages outweigh the similarities, which would explain why they belong to different language families.

There are, however, several Germanically-derived words in Spanish which correspond quite closely to words in modern Hochdeutsch, for example:

• East. In Spanish ‘oeste’, in German ‘Ost’ • Soup. In Spanish ‘sopa’, in German ‘Suppe’.• Mascot. In Spanish ‘mascota’, in German ‘Maskotte’.

However, it is debatable whether these words have the same Germanic origins, or are simply just derived or loaned from another language such as English.

Page 17: Comparing Germanic and Romance Languages (German and Spanish) By Annis Cordy, Jessica-Alice Cunliffe, Heidi Dobson, Rhys Jervis and Daniel Webb.

Spanish researchers

Heidi Dobson and Rhys Jervis

German researchers

Jess Cunliffe and Annis Cordy

Thanks for listening