Fray wrote one of the best books in Pennsylvania, and in his book he covers history, phonology, form, grammar, word formation and vocabulary (4, 5). One of the greatest effects of the language is religion, which brings many "Bible vocabularies". This example can be found in opposite words in the spirit and spirit (14). Another important influence is the economic level that most Pennsylvania and Dutch people are growing. Most are agricultural workers and farmers, there is little benefit in life and speech.
It is mainly used in the state of Pennsylvania, but since the 19th century the language has spread to the Midwest (Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, and other states), and most of today's speakers live. Yes. It developed from the Mandarin German dialect that the Netherlands Dutch brought to Germany before 1800. Originally by believers of various Christian sects (Lutheran, Mennonite, Amish, German Baptist brothers, Catholics) by Amish men and old-order Mennonites
Lancaster Amish is a Dutchman from Pennsylvania but Pennsylvania Dutch are not all Amish people. Dutch in Pennsylvania is the indigenous people in central Pennsylvania, especially Lancaster and its surrounding counties. Unlike Amish, they are not all religions. Instead, their common bonds are mostly German biographies (Pennsylvania Dutch is actually a German, Pennsylvania, German). They also have a family line in Welsh, English, Scots, Switzerland and French. The roots of Amish are in the Mennonite community. Both were part of the early European baptism movement that occurred during the reform. Anabaptists believe that only adults who admit their beliefs should be baptized and separated from a larger society. Many early anapaptists were executed as heathens as Catholics and Protestants, and many flew to the mountains of Switzerland and South Germany.