Jewish Azerbaijani Neo-Aramaic
[también conocido como Lishán Didán, Lishanán, لشان ددان]Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·con amenaza de extinción
Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·con amenaza de extinción
Lishán Didán, Lishanán, لشان ددان, Neo-Aramaic (Persian Azerbaijan), Lishanid Nash Didán, Persian Azerbaijan Jewish Aramaic, Lakhlokhi, Galihalu, לשן דידן, Lišān Didān, לשנן, Lišānān |
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Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Aramaic |
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La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
4,230 in Israel (2001). Population total all countries: 4,450.
La información está incompleta “A Tale in the Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Naghada (Persian Azerbaijan)” (243-281) . Simon Hopkins (1989)
Natural attrition and the heavy impact of Israeli Hebrew have taken their toll to such an extent that in half a generation from now many of these dialects will be gone forever.
Hebrew
Arabic
Turkish
Almost all forms of Neo-Aramaic now spoken in Israel are fraught with Hebrew intrusions, especially in the lexicon.
La información está incompleta “The Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Urmi” . Geoffrey Khan (2008) Gorgias Press
The majority of the Jewish community left the town in the 1950s and settled in the State of Israel.
La información está incompleta “Personal Communication” . Charles Häberl (2013)
La información está incompleta “The Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Persian Azerbaijan” . Irene Garbell (1965) Mouton de Gruyter
For want of a census of the population in Persia no exact data are available on the number of the speakers of the dialect; it can be assumed that at no time it exceeded 5,000.
Azeri Turkish; Kurdish; Persian
At the time of writing most of the speakers were living in Israel.