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・ Germanium disulfide
・ Germanium fluoride
・ Germanium iodide
・ Germanium monosulfide
・ Germanium monoxide
・ Germanium nitride
・ Germanium oxide
・ Germanium selenide
・ Germanium sulfide
・ Germanium telluride
・ Germanium tetrachloride
・ German-Soviet Frontier Treaty
・ German-speaking Community of Belgium
・ German-speaking electoral college
・ German-Speaking Jewry Heritage Museum Tefen
German-speaking Switzerland
・ German-Swiss border
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・ Germana Malabarba
・ Germana Marucelli
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German-speaking Switzerland : ウィキペディア英語版
German-speaking Switzerland

The German-speaking part of Switzerland ((ドイツ語:Deutschschweiz), (フランス語:Suisse alémanique), (イタリア語:Svizzera tedesca), (ロマンシュ語:Svizra tudestga)) comprises about 65 percent of Switzerland (North Western Switzerland, Eastern Switzerland, Central Switzerland, most of the Swiss plateau and the greater part of the Swiss Alps).
In 17 Swiss cantons, German is the only official language (Aargau, Appenzell Ausserrhoden, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Basel-Stadt, Basel-Landschaft, Glarus, Lucerne, Nidwalden, Obwalden, Schaffhausen, Schwyz, Solothurn, St. Gallen, Thurgau, Uri, Zug, Zurich).
In the cantons of Bern, Fribourg and Valais, French is co-official; in the trilingual canton of Graubünden, more than half of the population speaks German, while the rest speak Romansh or Italian. In each case, all languages are official languages of the respective canton.
While the French-speaking Swiss prefer to call themselves ''Romands'' and their part of the country ''la Romandie'', the German-speaking Swiss used to refer to (and, colloquially, still do) the French-speaking Swiss as "Welsche", and to their area as ''Welschland'', which has the same etymology as the English Welsh (see ''Walha''). In Germany ''Welsch'' and ''Welschland'' refer to Italy; there, the term is antiquated, rarely used, and somewhat disparaging.
By the Middle Ages, a marked difference had developed between the rural cantons of the German-speaking part of Switzerland and the city cantons, divided by views about trade and commerce. After the Reformation, all cantons were either Catholic or Protestant, and the denominational influences on culture added to the differences. Even today, where all cantons are somewhat denominationally mixed, the different historical denominations can be seen in the mountain villages, where Roman Catholic Central Switzerland abounds with chapels and statues of saints, and the farm houses in the very similar landscape of the Protestant Bernese Oberland show Bible verses carved on the housefronts, instead.
== Notes and references ==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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