Misplaced Pages

Alemannic - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Alemannic-language edition of Misplaced Pages

Favicon of Misplaced Pages Alemannic Misplaced Pages
Type of siteInternet encyclopedia project
Available inAlemannic
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
URLals.wikipedia.org
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
Content licenseCreative Commons Attribution/
Share-Alike
4.0 (most text also dual-licensed under GFDL)
Media licensing varies

The Alemannic Misplaced Pages (Alemannic: Alemannischi Misplaced Pages) is the Alemannic language edition of the Web-based free-content encyclopedia Misplaced Pages. The project was started on 13 November 2003, as an Alsatian language edition. A year later it was expanded to encompass all Alemannic dialects because of low activity in the first year. Since 2004 all Alemannic dialects are accepted on als:wp.

As of January 2025, this edition has about 30,700 articles and is the 116th largest Misplaced Pages by number of articles. Contributors and users include people from Germany, Switzerland, Austria, France, Liechtenstein, and even a few Walser people from Italy.

Language

Articles and article titles

A peculiarity of the Alemannic Misplaced Pages is the wide range of dialects permitted; all varieties of Alemannic, including Swiss German, Swabian, Alsatian, and all others are accepted. Authors may not normally alter the dialect used by another contributor, though exceptions are made for local topics, in which modifying the text to reflect the local variety is encouraged. Articles may thus be written in a mix of different varieties. Since there is no standardized orthography for Alemannic, spelling rules are quite relaxed. However, contributors are encouraged to adhere to spelling conventions found in the Alemannic-language literature, and introducing new symbols is not tolerated.

Article titles are in Standard German, but display is frequently manipulated to show Alemannic text.

Language codes

The code "als" was used because in 2003 there had been no language code for Alsatian. ISO 639-3 gives four codes for several Alemannic dialects:

As all of these four dialects are accepted on the Alemannic Misplaced Pages, it was decided not to move the Alemannic Misplaced Pages to gsw.wikipedia.org, even though the code als stands for Tosk Albanian in ISO 639-3. To solve this problem a request for a superior code for all Alemannic dialects has been submitted to SIL International by Alemannic Wikipedians.

Despite the existence of dedicated ISO 639-3 codes and the possibility of more specific marking with country code subtags, all pages use 'gsw' in the HTML language tag.

List of dialects that are used on single-dialect pages

Below is a list of dialects that have a category in als:Kategorie:Misplaced Pages:Dialekt and where that category contains at least one article.

List of dialects used for a full article in the Alemannic Misplaced Pages
BCP 47 Name (autonym) Name (English) Country Part of
swg Schwäbisch Swabian DE Schwäbisch
wae Wallisertiitsch Walser German CH, AT Höchstalemannisch
wae-AT Vorarlbärgischs Walsertüütsch AT Höchstalemannisch
gsw Oberrhiinalemannisch DE, FR? Niederalemannisch
gsw Bodeseealemannisch DE, CH Mittelalemannisch
gsw-AT Vorarlbärgisch AT (several, group of dialects)
gsw-LI Liachtastänerisch LI (several, group of dialects)
gsw-FR Elsässisch Alsatian German FR Niederalemannisch > Oberrheinalemannisch
gsw-DE Markgräflerisch DE Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Aargauerdüütsch Aargau German CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Baselbieterdütsch CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Baseldytsch Basel German CH Niederalemannisch > Oberrheinalemannisch
gsw-CH Bärndütsch Bernese German CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Freiämtertütsch CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Glarnertüütsch CH Höchstalemannisch
gsw-CH Ostschwizertütsch CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Schwyzerdütsch CH Höchstalemannisch
gsw-CH Soledurnerdütsch CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH St. Gallerdütsch CH Hochalemannisch
gsw-CH Seislertütsch CH Höchstalemannisch
gsw-CH Züritüütsch Zürich German CH Hochalemannisch

Other Wikipedias in German dialect

Alemannic Misplaced Pages was the first Misplaced Pages in a German dialect, followed by the Bavarian Misplaced Pages and the Ripuarian Misplaced Pages.

Alemannic in other Wikimedia projects

Other Wikimedia projects in Alemannic have also been created, such as an Alemannic Wiktionary, an Alemannic Wikiquote, and an Alemannic Wikibooks. As activity in these projects was low even after years, the community of the Alemannic Misplaced Pages decided to merge all Alemannic projects and import all contents of the other projects into the Alemannic Misplaced Pages. Since April 2008 these projects are separate namespaces within the Alemannic Misplaced Pages. Also an Alemannic Wikisource and an Alemannic Wikinews have been created as separate namespaces within als:wp.

Wikidata supports one language with code 'gsw' and name 'Swiss German'. A proposal to remove it has not been adopted.

Milestones

Milestone Date Article
1 article 2003-12-27 Chemie
1,000 articles 2005-10-13 Le Landeron (Zunftwesen)
2,000 articles 2006-06-07 Geschichte des Elsass
3,000 articles 2007-05-01 Arlesheim
4,000 articles 2008-07-12 Erklärung der Menschen- und Bürgerrechte
5,000 articles 2009-05-08 Hunspach
6,000 articles 2010-02-21 Amt Meienberg
7,000 articles 2010-12-14 Batterf
8,000 articles 2011-02-22 Buttwil
9,000 articles 2011-05-16 Boron
10,000 articles 2011-06-22 Josef Villiger
11,000 articles 2012-02-21 Summerlied
12,000 articles 2012-08-21 Quiberon
13,000 articles 2012-12-13 Saint-Aubin-Sauges
14,000 articles 2013-04-03 Riemschneider
15,000 articles 2013-08-06 Baritonhorn
16,000 articles 2014-02-04 Tenorhorn
17,000 articles 2014-06-08 Basilius Amerbach der Ältere
18,000 articles 2015-01-17 Siegfried Lehmann
19,000 articles 2015-05-28 Lauingen (Donau)
20,000 articles 2015-10-12 Gion Deplazes
21,000 articles 2016-03-15 Fotze
22,000 articles 2016-11-02 Bezirk Weinfelden
23,000 articles 2017-06-19 Biermösl Blosn
24,000 articles 2018-02-15 Schweizer Singbuch
25,000 articles 2018-09-12 Schwyzer Meie
26,000 articles 2019-07-12 Internationales Dialektinstitut
27,000 articles 2020-02-25 Röllelibutzen

See also

References

  1. Alemannic Misplaced Pages statistics page
  2. Meta-Wiki's list of language Wikipedias ordered by size
  3. Misplaced Pages:Artikel#Froge un Antworte zum Dial.C3.A4kt
  4. look here
  5. Milestones on Alemannic Misplaced Pages

Sources and external links


Misplaced Pages language editions by article count
6,000,000+
2,000,000+
1,000,000+
100,000
–999,999
10,000
–99,999
<10,000
See also: List of Wikimedia wikis
Wikipedias in Germanic languages
6,000,000+
articles
2,000,000+
500,000+
200,000+
100,000+
50,000+
20,000+
10,000+
5,000+
2,000+
500+
Categories: