. . . . . "Elbingian"@en . . . "2389"^^ . . . "Elbingian (German: Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he, lit.\u2009'dialect of the Elbingian upland') was a subdialect of Low Prussian spoken in East Prussia and West Prussia in the region of the , north of Elbl\u0105g. It had a border with Oberl\u00E4ndisch, Mundart des K\u00FCrzungsgebiets, and Nehrungisch. It is related to Plautdietsch, which has far more speakers. The 1882 edition of dictionary of dialects includes Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he using this wording."@en . . "Poland"@en . . . . "Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Indo-European"@en . "1119027547"^^ . . "Elbingian upland"@en . . . "63693136"^^ . . . . . . "dialect"@en . . . . "Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he"@en . . "Elbingian"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Elbingian (German: Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he, lit.\u2009'dialect of the Elbingian upland') was a subdialect of Low Prussian spoken in East Prussia and West Prussia in the region of the , north of Elbl\u0105g. It had a border with Oberl\u00E4ndisch, Mundart des K\u00FCrzungsgebiets, and Nehrungisch. It is related to Plautdietsch, which has far more speakers. The 1882 edition of dictionary of dialects includes Mundart der Elbinger H\u00F6he using this wording."@en . . . . "Elbingian"@en . . . . . . . .