Weert dialect or Weert Limburgish (natively , Standard Dutch: ) is the city dialect and variant of Limburgish spoken in the Dutch city of Weert alongside Standard Dutch. All of its speakers are bilingual with standard Dutch. There are two varieties of the dialect: rural and urban. The latter is called in Standard Dutch and in the city dialect. Van der Looij gives the Dutch name for the peripheral dialect.
Unless otherwise noted, all examples are in .
Some dialect words are frequently replaced with their Standard Dutch counterparts, so that 'chickens', 'you' (pl.) and 'often' are often heard in place of the Limburgish words (or ), and .
The voiced velar stop is used less often by younger speakers, who merge it with the voiced velar fricative . In Standard Dutch, occurs only as an allophone of before voiced stops, as in 'handkerchief' and (in the Netherlands alone) as a separate phoneme in loanwords such as 'goal' (in sports).
According to Peter Ladefoged, the vowel inventory of the dialect of Weert may be the richest in the world. It features 28 vowels, among which there are 12 long monophthongs (three of which surface as centering diphthongs), 10 short monophthongs and 6 diphthongs. Such a large vowel inventory is a result of the loss of a contrastive pitch accent found in other Limburgish dialects, giving and a phonemic status. Those vowels correspond to the phonemically short and combined with Accent 2 in other dialects.
In the table above, the vowels spelled with , , and are transcribed with phonetically explicit symbols. Elsewhere in the article, the diacritics are ignored for vowels other than and , in case of which the lowering diacritic is essential in order to distinguish them from the close-mid .
Taking all of that into consideration, the vocalic phonemes of the Weert dialect can be classified much like those found in other Limburgish dialects. Peter Ladefoged says that the Weert dialect is an example of a language variety that needs five height features to distinguish between , , , and , which are [high], [mid-high], [mid], [mid-low] and [low], respectively.
In this table, vowels in the mid row correspond to the open-mid in other dialects. The two vowels in the open-mid row correspond to the open in other dialects, which means that the open-mid row can be merged with the open row, leaving just four phonemic heights. In this article, five heights are assumed, following the sources. In his paper on the best IPA transcription of Standard Dutch, Gussenhoven has criticized the analysis of the open-mid as phonologically open on the basis of the vowel being phonetically too close to be analyzed as open like (which is front in Standard Dutch, just like in Weert).
The vowel+glide sequences , and pattern as the short counterparts of - see below.
Sources differ in the way they transcribe the unrounded front vowels of the Weert dialect in words such as 'to say', 'leaf' (dim.), 'dishcloth' and 'tent'. The differences are listed below.
This means that the symbols and have the opposite values, depending on the system. In this article, they stand for the vowels in words such as and . However, use them for the vowels in and , whereas and are written with and , respectively. In IPA transcriptions of Limburgish, the usual symbols employed for such words are and . In this article, a phonetically explicit transcription is used, not least because are as close as in Weert. This transcription closely follows the symbols chosen by , though he does not use the lowering diacritic for the vowels in and . Furthermore, the phonetic open front vowel of Weert is , which is as front as and .
The closing diphthongs are given a phonetically explicit transcription in this article to match the changes described above. This kind of transcription has been used by e.g. for vowels found in a transitional Brabantian-Limburgish dialect of Orsmaal-Gussenhoven.
The Weert dialect allows a very large amount of vowel+glide sequences. Both short and long vowels can precede and ; in addition to that, the combinations with short vowels can be followed by a tautosyllabic consonant. There are five times as many possible combinations of a vowel followed by than the possible combination of a vowel+: 15 in the former case () and just 3 in the latter case (). Out of those, both and are marginal. Speakers who distinguish from feature an additional sequence .
The sequences contrast with the diphthongs . The former begin with more open vowels than the diphthongs. In addition, the diphthongs are all longer than the sequences. Thus, what in tonal dialects of Limburgish is the contrast between 'legs' (pronounced with Accent 1) and 'leg' (pronounced with Accent 2) is a length and vowel quality difference in Weert: vs. . Other (near-)minimal pairs include 'German' (adj.) vs. 'fun' and 'eye' vs. 'also'. This kind of contrast between a vowel+glide sequence and a diphthong is extremely rare in the world's languages.
The Weert dialect features an intonation system that is very similar to Standard Dutch. The stress pattern is the same as in the standard language. It does not feature a contrastive pitch accent, instead, the difference between Accent 1 and Accent 2 found in the more easterly dialects of Limburgish corresponds to a vowel length distinction in Weert; compare 'rabbits' and 'mountains' with 'rabbit' and 'mountain'. The phonological vowel+glide sequences correspond to combined with Accent 1 in other dialects, whereas the phonological diphthongs (which are longer than the vowel+glide sequences) correspond to combined with Accent 2 in other dialects.
According to Linda Heijmans, Weert dialect may have never been tonal at all, and the use of contrastive vowel length in minimal pairs such as â could have sprung from the desire to sound like speakers of tonal dialects spoken nearby Weert, such as the dialect of Baexem. This hypothesis has been rejected by Jo Verhoeven, who found that Weert speakers can still distinguish between the former tonal pairs on the basis of tone whenever vowel length is ambiguous. Thus, his findings support the theory that the former tone distinction was at some point reinterpreted as a vowel length distinction.
The sample text is a reading of the first sentence of The North Wind and the Sun.
The dialect of Weert is one of the very few dialects that mark the distinction between Accent 1 and Accent 2 in spelling. In this dialect, this is a vowel length distinction, rather than a tonal one (see above).
The phoneme-grapheme correspondence is as follows: