Of course Berlienrisch is closer to high German than it is to austrian German, seeing as its a different country. The different german regions though, they tend to often have very distinct accents/dialects just like you described for Austria. Mostly throughout Middle Germany from west to east. Although, the groups using those are rather small compared to the rest of the population. For me as a German also living in Vienna () the Wienerisch isn´t that different, apart from words unknown to me (like "Kren" for example).CapnNismo wrote:
Sorry Sisco, but my cousin's from Berlin and I live in Vienna and as far as I'm concerned, the Berliners speak a language that is light years closer to High German than what comes out of the mouth of a typical Wiener.
In Germany, you have a situation more similar to the United States in terms of different regional dialects. In the US, the accent is what changes the most just like in Germany, then you have a words that one region uses that another doesn't or the meanings are slightly off. In Austria, you have entirely different languages, similar to Swiss German versus High German, where entire words are spoken so radically differently and certain words exist in one Austrian dialect but not in another. The differences are truly far greater between provinces in Austria than they are in Germany - it baffled me for the first few years when I moved here...
One can´t really compare the Austrian/Swiss german to the German german though. Despite their roots, hundreds of years of different influences turned them into rather different languages
