Getelands

Getelands (, Getelandjs ) or West Getelands (Westgetelands, Wesgetelandjs ) is a South Brabantian dialect spoken in the eastern part of Flemish Brabant as well as the western part of Limburg in Belgium. It is a transitional dialect between South Brabantian and West Limburgish.

The dialect is named after the river Gete. It is an endangered language.

Characteristics
The first person singular pronoun is typically the Limburgish ich, instead of Brabantian/Standard Dutch ik. The diminutive forms are formed as in Limburgish, using the umlaut. In Truierlands (sometimes called East Getelands), the plural is also formed by using the umlaut (pot vs. pöt ), in contrast to Getelands plurals formed the Standard Dutch way (pot  vs. potte ). Both dialects share the lack of pitch accent found in most varieties of Limburgish.

Word accent in the Orsmaal-Gussenhoven dialect shows phonetic features of accent 2 (the dragging tone) of the neighboring West Limburgish dialects.

Phonology
This section shows the phonology of the Orsmaal-Gussenhoven dialect, which is spoken in the Linter municipality. The dialect of Melkwezer has a similar phonology, except for the fact that the diphthong is realized with a mid onset:.


 * is restricted to word-initial position, and occurs only in loanwords from French. It tends to either devoice to or be affricated to.
 * The exact place of articulation of varies:
 * Velar before and after back vowels and, in the case of, also when it is preceded by a back vowel in an intervocalic position between stressed and unstressed syllable.
 * Palatal before and after front vowels and, in the case of, also after.
 * may be dropped by some speakers.
 * has a few possible realizations, none of which are uvular. This stands in contrast to most varieties of Limburgish, where is a uvular trill or fricative.
 * Apical trill or an apical fricative  before a stressed vowel in word-initial syllables.
 * Intervocalically and in the onset after a consonant, it may be a tap.
 * Word-final is highly variable; the most frequent variants are an apical fricative trill, an apical fricative  and an apical non-sibilant affricate . The last two variants tend to be voiceless  in pre-pausal position.
 * The sequence can be vocalized to  or.


 * Peters gives six more diphthongs, which are . He gives no evidence for their phonemic status. As Brabantian dialects are known for both diphthongizing and especially monophthongizing, the distinction between the closing diphthongs and the monophthongs is ignored elsewhere in the article, with ⟨eː, øː, oː, ɛː, œː, ɒː⟩ being used as cover symbols for both.
 * The open central vowels are phonologically back in that they trigger the velar allophones of and.
 * Among the long rounded vowels, before  within the same syllable vary between monophthongs  and centering diphthongs, which often are disyllabic  (with the first portion realized as a closing diphthong). At least in the case of  and , the tongue movement may be so slight that they are sometimes better described as lip-diphthongs . In the same environment,  can be disyllabic . For the sake of simplicity, those allophones are transcribed  in phonetic transcription.
 * There are two additional short tense vowels and, which are tenser (higher and perhaps also more rounded) than the native short  (with the latter being  phonetically). They appear only in a few French loanwords. Their status as phonemes separate from the long tense  and  is unclear; Peters treats them as marginal phonemes.
 * occurs only before alveolar consonants. Phonetically, it varies between.
 * Stressed short vowels cannot occur in open syllables. Exceptions to this rule are high-frequency words like wa 'what' and loanwords from French.