The Dutch-German Border: Relating Linguistic, Geographic and Social Distances | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.3366/E1753854809000342 Corpus ID: 1022968The Dutch-German Border: Relating Linguistic, Geographic and Social Distances @article{Vriend2008TheDB, title={The Dutch-German Border: Relating Linguistic, Geographic and Social Distances}, author={F. D. Vriend and Charlotte Giesbers and R. Hout and Louis ten Bosch}, journal={Int. J. Humanit. Arts Comput.}, year={2008}, volume={2}, pages={119} } F. D. Vriend, Charlotte Giesbers, +1 author Louis ten Bosch Published 2008 Computer Science, Geography Int. J. Humanit. Arts Comput. In this paper we relate linguistic, geographic and social distances to each other in order to get a better understanding of the impact the Dutch-German state border has had on the linguistic characteristics of a sub-area of the Kleverlandish dialect area. This area used to be a perfect dialect continuum. We test three models for explaining today's pattern of linguistic variation in the area. In each model another variable is used as the determinant of linguistic variation: geographic distance… Expand View via Publisher repository.ubn.ru.nl Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 8 CitationsBackground Citations 3 View All Figures, Tables, and Topics from this paper figure 1 table 1 figure 2 table 2 figure 3 table 3 figure 4 table 4 figure 5 figure 6 figure 7 View All 11 Figures & Tables Social welfare model Geographical distance Social structure Triune continuum paradigm 8 Citations Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Dialect borders - political regions are better predictors than economy or religion C. Derungs, C. Sieber, E. Glaser, Robert Weibel Geography, Computer Science Digit. Scholarsh. 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