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  • curprev 10:0910:09, 3 January 2022WingerBot talk contribsm 6,118 bytes −2 Alemannic German: correct indentation of section 3 (Noun) to 3 and section 5 (Noun) to 3; German: correct misformatted language section divider at end; Polish: correct whitespace of section 0 undo

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  • curprev 05:5805:58, 1 February 2021WingerBot talk contribsm 5,928 bytes −16 major cleanup of German non-verb entry etymology (eliminate {{etyl}}), alternative forms, quotes/usexes, categories, misformatted entries, place names, given names, etc. (manually assisted) undo

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18 December 2019

  • curprev 17:2017:20, 18 December 201990.186.83.214 talk 5,720 bytes −3 →‎German: And there still is no /ɑ/ in German. It's a misleading and wrong sign repeatedly used by one editor. German /a/ may be front, central or back, whether short or long. For exampe, in the very north short /a/ is front and long /a:/ is back, in Luxembourg/Trier area it's exactly the other way round. undo
  • curprev 17:1617:16, 18 December 201990.186.83.214 talk 5,723 bytes −232 →‎Pronunciation: "now chiefly colloquial" is also used in other cases and is clearer. the feeling that /x/ is colloquial is absolutely not restricted to younger speakers. certainly 100 years ago it wasn't colloquial, but people in their 60s or 70s now have already learned the /k/ standard in school. undo

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