Jewish Azerbaijani Neo-Aramaic
[également appelé Lishán Didán, Lishanán, لشان ددان]Classification : Afro-Asiatic
·menacée
Classification : Afro-Asiatic
·menacée
Lishán Didán, Lishanán, لشان ددان, Neo-Aramaic (Persian Azerbaijan), Lishanid Nash Didán, Persian Azerbaijan Jewish Aramaic, Lakhlokhi, Galihalu, לשן דידן, Lišān Didān, לשנן, Lišānān |
||
Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Aramaic |
||
ISO 639-3 |
||
trg |
||
En tant que csv |
||
Recherche au sein de la communauté OLAC (Open Language Archives Community) |
Informations incomplètes “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
4,230 in Israel (2001). Population total all countries: 4,450.
Informations incomplètes “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.
Informations incomplètes “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.
Informations incomplètes “Personal Communication” . Charles Häberl (2013)
Informations incomplètes “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.