How many dialects does your language have? We have 3

How many dialects does your language have? We have 3.

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en.oxforddictionaries.com/explore/what-is-the-difference-between-dialect-and-accent/
youtube.com/watch?v=7Bm1pso2jvw
youtube.com/watch?v=_6XKe07lRFA
youtube.com/watch?v=LvN1YIu7G8Q
youtube.com/watch?v=XktgNvu1eWU
youtube.com/watch?v=GYFakLboBCQ
youtube.com/watch?v=Nchzv0w9jp4
youtube.com/watch?v=1n7tuvSJwdQ
youtube.com/watch?v=xEFEFt1LvVE
youtube.com/watch?v=WwTGNiIz42o
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0
based

dozens probably

0

Its basically dead so only one form of it now anyway

For Egyptian Arabic, 3 - Alexanderine, Delta and Se'idi

For Coptic, 2 - Bohairic(Delta/Lower Egypt) and Sahidic(Upper Egypt).

Probs around 40

a lot
counting dialects of english in canada alone there are 7 of them here

6 main ones, around 18 minor ones.

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Depends on how deep you want to go.

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main ones in england are northern and southern and the shitlands have features of both. even then you can tell roughly which town someone is from. maker of the map obviously didnt bother to research welsh/scottish/irish dialects

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do you count dalmatian as italian dialect or croatian?

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Around 5

at least one for each parish

I honestly have no fucking idea come to think of it. We have a ton of accents but the main Anglo cunts are not speaking different dialects.
Where do you get this from?

For Spanish we have five dialects: Ecuatorial, Ribereño, Ribereño-andino, Andino, Amazónico.
And for Quechua we also have five dialects: Quechua II a, Quechua II b, Quechua II c, Quechua I and Quichua Ecuatoriano.

>how many dialects does the Spanish language has?

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Some say around 5-6. But if every single one counts, even smaller local changes then it's probably around 100.
Pretty much every singe village speaks differently.

Our dialects became independent languages apparently, so 0.

Around 50 I would say, probably around 100. Hard to tell, every single county has it's own and some cities, towns and areas speak their own dialect.

Yeah, If we will not speak about surzhik, it will be gone, of course.

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How widely is Quechua still spoken today?

We only have one that matters.

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I count it as khoholese

It depends, if you're a libtard, you think that we have 3 main dialects of Polish and Kashubian and Silesian are separate languages.

If you're normal, you think that we have 4 main dialects and Kashubian is a separate language.

If you're a hardcore nationalist, you think all Europe east of the Oder river to the Dneper river speaks Polish and Belarussian and Ukrainian are dialects of Polish as well.

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>If you're a hardcore nationalist, you think all Europe east of the Oder river to the Dneper river speaks Polish and Belarussian and Ukrainian are dialects of Polish as well.
Is there any actual basis for this belief or are these people just retarded? I don't know nearly enough about Slavic languages to be able to tell.

I was actually joking, even though sometimes retarded 15-year-old "nationalists" try to prove that Belarussian or Ukrainian are more similar to Polish than to Russian therefore we should conquer them or something.

There is many little dialects, which looks like independent languages russian-chinese, russian-*any caucas language*, russian-norwegian and etc.
And there is one giant surzhik, which is just melted russian and ukranian(+belorussian).

>If you're a hardcore nationalist, you think all Europe east of the Oder river to the Dneper river speaks Polish and Belarussian and Ukrainian are dialects of Polish as well.
Dialects of Russian, of course.

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I don't know, 200?

It is estimated that Quechua is spoken by 12 million people in South America, and right now is the second most spoken language in Peru, followed by English.

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Japanese dialects are roughly divided into 16 groups, and those are subdivided into at least 180.

No dialect really, rather just accents
There's about six, most notable are harðmæli and linmæli. Harðmæli is how northerners speak, linmæli is how southern savages speak it

kek dialectlet
we have a different dialect every 20km but generally you can put this into 4 broad groups, this is for Flanders only
When I speak my local dialect a Flemish guy living 100km away will not to barely understand me;

Don't get me started.

too many to know

Many

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Broad dialects(not counting second language speakers): British, Irish, North American, Oceanic, Caribbean and Bermuda.
But than you can break those up into dialects. Britain has most diversity, Scottish being completely different from London speak.
American has some divergent dialects, with Black vernacular being he most divergent. There’s also Chicano English. Than you have regional dialects, Southern. Southern dialect varies in both what type and how strong it is (I.e how influenced the persons dialect is by Standard Am). Than there’s the Nasally accent in minnesota and western Canada.
Ultimately it’s hard to define these regional dialects since they exist on one continuum

For Sp*nish, 0.
There are no dialects in sp*nish, only accents.

>Lappish
>öster-bottian
>savo
Only 3.

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Accents are a feature of dialects though, so it’s impossible to have varying accents but not dialects

none that i know of

>counting shtokavian as a dialect of croatian instead of calling it what it is, serbian.

basejat

But, different accents alone don't constitute distinct dialects of the same language.
en.oxforddictionaries.com/explore/what-is-the-difference-between-dialect-and-accent/

Every little area had a dialect, now we just say it's Northern and Southern since the South barely has any dialects left. People interject dialectical words for amusement and that's how we recognize foreign spies.

There may be dialects in Spain if you consider some of the meme languages spoken there, like Andalusian, as Sp*nish (Castilian or whatever). Or if you consider the way how poor people speak in regards of pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary choice in contrast to how educated people tend to speak or something like this, I guess.

Where do I start?


Classical Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=7Bm1pso2jvw
Modern Standard Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=_6XKe07lRFA

Egyptian Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=LvN1YIu7G8Q
Levantine Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=XktgNvu1eWU
Sudanese Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=GYFakLboBCQ
Najdi Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=Nchzv0w9jp4
Moroccan Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=1n7tuvSJwdQ
Gulf Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=xEFEFt1LvVE
Libyan Arabic: youtube.com/watch?v=WwTGNiIz42o

And more and more and more. But to a non Arabic speaker "all rook same" probably applies here.

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Well, hard to say.. Could be 5, could be 20, or even more.

So many its probably indescribable.

Only 2
Human(English)
And orcrish(not English)

Catalan, Galician and Portuguese, all retarded Spanish.

tons, but most are extinct

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rio plata ispanish s actually a dialect mane

I doubt these are considered dialects, but languages. Objectively I'd say if you cannot understand another dialect it's probably a language.

Unlike swedish and norwegian and danish which are just dialects of each other

20 different ones in Wales and Ireland so maybe more

It's literally impossible to quantify. This is just the middle of Norway alone.

Norway is the autism of dialects tbqh.

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American English doesn't really have dialects, just noticable accents and slang.

loads

Where the fuck do you even start with that one. There was a uni study on the subject which reckons there’s a different accent every 25 miles in the UK

I googled ot and stopped counting at well over 200 dialects of English not including creoles.

40? really? all i can think of off the top of my head is a southern mom that uses the hard 'R', shakka surfer dude 'sandbarrrrr', a noo yawker from 'noo yawk, noo yawk', a calm bob ross and mark wahlberg/peter griffin

There is probably a linguistic term for it but we have regional differences which aren't as structurally significant say different region of Japan. You could probably assign a "sub-dialect" to every capital and surrounding area.

yeah but education/formality seems to be more the case, significant difference is only really apparent in rurally isolated areas aka not many people at all

and abos

There are nuanced differences in common vernacular based on region, mostly based on state capitals due to population centers. Class is involved but there are still enough differences based on regional context to pick up on things that sound different which carries across wealth in its own way.
It might be accurate to suggest the wealth/upper class has more overall similitude over region than the more divergent working and middle classes. This could have some relation to social mobility and poorer people being more entrenched in their local linguistic ecosystem and have a smaller diversity of input.
Could be entirely fucking off base though, hey.

from what ive read about ur dialects it seems most of u niggas are just exaggerating and consider almost any speaking funny a dialect

Must get annoying having your roads shut down every year for quasi-suicidal bike race

I agree. It'll be easier to quantify in a hundred years though, most people haven't lived in the same area for more than two generations yet. I'd hazard that less than 1% of aussie families have stayed in the same region for more than 5 gens (much unlike other countries). Being a Sydney/Canberra/Tablelands guy I was shocked to hear the filth coming out of rural QLDer's, Tassie and Perth cunts mouths. In the city I refine and articulate but out on the farms I adapt to everyone else there. Guess it's all about understanding eachother.