Reconstruction talk:Proto-Germanic/þiudiskaz

And what with "tedesco"? Ymar 13:27, 16 April 2011 (UTC)
 * Tedesco is the Italian for German, so we already have it. Mglovesfun (talk) 13:29, 16 April 2011 (UTC)

(maybe) to add
Oberlausitzisch: doitsch About German seems to miss many German dialects. Bavarian: deitsch [adjective]; Deitsch [noun] Low German: dütsch, düütsch etc.; Dütsch, Düütsch etc. And as language names are added, what about other derived terms like Deutscher (German (person)), Deutschland (Germany), ...? -91.6.194.71 02:33, 1 January 2018 (UTC)
 * High German:
 * Mansfeldisch: teitsch
 * German:
 * many more dialects might have a noun with a capital, so there might for example be:
 * English:
 * As borrowings are added, what about English Deutsch?

(probably) to check
-91.6.194.71 02:33, 1 January 2018 (UTC)
 * Suerländer-Märkisch: duͤdsk
 * ain't uͤ changed to ü? At least for New High German it's common practice to normalise/convert it
 * Ravensbergisch-Lippisch: duütsk
 * www.kinder-lippe.de (not durably archived or just a mentioning in a dictionary) has Lippisch duitsk, and there might be a few printed Lippisch books with duitsk in it (is it in a book by Wilhelm Oesterhaus?)

(maybe) to change
Dutch: Duits (“German”) Hunsrik: deitsch, taytx [adjective]; Deitsch, taytx [noun]  or once: German: deutsch, Deutsch German: deutsch; Deutsch -91.6.194.71 02:33, 1 January 2018 (UTC)
 * Dutch: Diets (“Middle Dutch”)
 * that's twice "Dutch".
 * Hunsrik: Deitsch, taytx
 * by the entries that are only nouns, and it might properly be:
 * German: deutsch; Deutsch
 * qualifiers might be useful, like