The following pages link to Germanic umlaut
External toolsShowing 50 items.
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Afrikaans (links | edit)
- Burgundians (links | edit)
- Danish language (links | edit)
- EBCDIC (links | edit)
- Frisian languages (links | edit)
- West Flemish (links | edit)
- Faroese language (links | edit)
- Germanic languages (links | edit)
- German language (links | edit)
- Germanic peoples (links | edit)
- Great Vowel Shift (links | edit)
- High German languages (links | edit)
- Inch (links | edit)
- Low Saxon (links | edit)
- Luxembourgish (links | edit)
- Norwegian language (links | edit)
- Norn language (links | edit)
- Old Norse (links | edit)
- Old English (links | edit)
- Romance languages (links | edit)
- Swedish language (links | edit)
- Swiss German (links | edit)
- South African English (links | edit)
- Uralic languages (links | edit)
- Yiddish (links | edit)
- Vowel harmony (links | edit)
- Grimm's law (links | edit)
- Verner's law (links | edit)
- Middle English (links | edit)
- Languages constructed by Tolkien (links | edit)
- English plurals (links | edit)
- Scots language (links | edit)
- Crossword (links | edit)
- Alsatian dialect (links | edit)
- Suppletion (links | edit)
- Paul Kruger (links | edit)
- Vandalic language (links | edit)
- Index of linguistics articles (links | edit)
- Low Franconian (links | edit)
- North Germanic languages (links | edit)
- Cimbrian language (links | edit)
- Bavarian language (links | edit)
- West Germanic languages (links | edit)
- Vowel shift (links | edit)
- Bokmål (links | edit)
- Indo-European ablaut (links | edit)
- Nynorsk (links | edit)
- Northern Low Saxon (links | edit)
- Marchian (links | edit)
- Germanic weak verb (links | edit)