From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of languages
This is a list of languages and groups of languages that developed within
Jewish diaspora communities through contact with surrounding languages.
[1]
Afro-Asiatic languages
Cushitic languages
Semitic languages
Arabic languages
Aramaic languages
Other Afro-Asiatic languages
Judeo-Berber
[1] (a group of different Jewish Berber languages and their dialects)
Austronesian languages
Dravidian languages
(both written in local alphabets)
Indo-European languages
Germanic languages
Indo-Aryan languages
Iranian languages
Judeo-Latin (extinct or evolved into Judeo-Romance languages)
Other Indo-European languages
Kartvelian languages
Turkic languages
Creole languages
See also
References
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m Rubin, Aaron D.; Kahn, Lily (30 October 2015).
Handbook of Jewish Languages .
BRILL .
ISBN
9789004297357 .
^ Hudson, Grover (2013). "A Comparative Dictionary of the Agaw Languages by David Appleyard (review)". Northeast African Studies . New series. 13 (2).
doi :
10.1353/nas.2013.0021 .
S2CID
143577497 .
^
"Judeo-Arabic" . Jewish Languages . Retrieved 2024-01-25 .
^ Khan, Geoffrey (1997). "The Arabic Dialect of the Karaite Jews of Hit". Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik (34): 53–102.
ISSN
0170-026X .
JSTOR
43525685 .
^ Khan, Geoffrey (8 June 1999).
A Grammar of Neo-Aramaic: The Dialect of the Jews of Arbel .
BRILL .
ISBN
9789004305045 .
^
a
b
c Weninger, Stefan (23 December 2011).
The Semitic Languages: An International Handbook .
Walter de Gruyter . p. 709.
ISBN
9783110251586 .
^
"Language Contact Manchester" . languagecontact.humanities.manchester.ac.uk . Retrieved 2022-11-12 .
^
"Asian and African studies blog: Judeo-Persian" . blogs.bl.uk .
^
"A Unique Hebrew Glossary from India" . Gorgias Press LLC .
^
a
b
"Liturgical miscellany; Or 14014 : 1800–1899 era" .
British Library . Retrieved 30 October 2019 .
^
a
b
c
d
e Spolsky, Bernard (27 March 2014).
The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History .
Cambridge University Press . p. 241.
ISBN
9781139917148 .
^ Borjian, Habib (2015). "Judeo-Iranian Languages". In Kahn, Lily; Rubin, Aaron D. (eds.).
A Handbook of Jewish Languages . Leiden and Boston:
BRILL . pp. 234–295.
^ Habib Borjian and Daniel Kaufman, “Juhuri: from the Caucasus to New York City”, Special Issue: Middle Eastern Languages in Diasporic USA communities, in International Journal of Sociology of Language, issue edited by Maryam Borjian and Charles Häberl, issue 237, 2016, pp. 51–74.
[1] .
^ Hary, Benjamin; Benor, Sarah Bunin (5 November 2018).
Languages in Jewish Communities, Past and Present .
Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG .
ISBN
9781501504631 – via
Google Books .
^
a
b
c
d
e
"Judeo-Italian" . Jewish Languages . Retrieved 2024-01-19 .
^ Ryzhik, Michael (2016-08-16).
"Grammatica storica delle parlate giudeo-italiane, written by M. Aprile. 2012" . Journal of Jewish Languages . 4 (2): 261–266.
doi :
10.1163/22134638-12340074 .
ISSN
2213-4387 .
^
a
b
c
d Minervini, Laura (2021-06-28),
"Judeo-Romance in Italy and France (Judeo-Italian, Judeo-French, Judeo-Occitan)" , Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics , Oxford University Press, retrieved 2024-01-19
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i Colasuonno, Maria Maddalena (2018-06-28),
"Modern Judeo-Italian in the Light of Italian Dialectology and Jewish Interlinguistics through Three Case Studies: Judeo-Mantuan, Judeo-Venetian, and Judeo-Livornese" , Jewish Languages in Historical Perspective , BRILL, pp. 122–156,
ISBN
978-90-04-37658-8 , retrieved 2024-01-19
^
International Encyclopedia of Linguistics .
Oxford University Press . 1 January 2003. p. 83.
ISBN
9780195139778 .
^ Katz, Dovid (October 2012). Bláha, Ondřej; Dittman, Robert; Uličná, Lenka (eds.).
"Knaanic in the Medieval and Modern Scholarly Imagination" (PDF) . Knaanic Language: Structure and Historical Background : 164, 173. Retrieved 1 August 2015 .
^
a
b Lomtadze, Tamari; Enoch, Reuven (2019).
"Judeo-Georgian Language as an Identity Marker of Georgian Jews (The Jews Living in Georgia)" . Journal of Jewish Languages . 7 : 1–26.
doi :
10.1163/22134638-07011146 .
S2CID
166295234 .
^
THE GEORGIAN JEWS (from antiquity to 1921) (PDF) (in Russian, Georgian, English, and German). D. Baazov Museum of History of Jews of Georgia. p. 55.
^
"YIVO | Krymchaks" . www.yivoencyclopedia.org . Retrieved 1 August 2015 .
^
Handbook of Jewish Languages: Revised and Updated Edition .
BRILL . 1 September 2017.
ISBN
9789004359543 .
^ Jacobs, Neil G.
"Jewish Papiamentu" . Jewish Language Project . Retrieved 2023-05-29 .