Mlaḥsô
[también conocido como Mlahsö, Mlaḥso, Suryoyo]Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·Dormant
Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·Dormant
Mlahsö, Mlaḥso, Suryoyo, Mlahso |
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Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Aramaic |
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None |
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ISO 639-3 |
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lhs |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “Turoyo and Mlahso” (697-708) . Otto Jastrow (2011) , Stefan Weninger · de Gruyter
Was spoken in two villages in Diyarbakir province. The population was wiped out due to ethnocide. The few individuals who had escaped the massacres have since died.
La información está incompleta “Der neuaramäische Dialekt von Mlaḥsô” . Otto Jastrow (1994) Harrassowitz
1
Author believed his informant to be the last speaker. This speaker's sister had passive knowledge of the language.
Speakers were victims of genocide
Kurdish
Author's three consultants used Kurdish for normal conversation, and hadn't used the language in years.
The name Mlahso comes from a villiage which is now called Yünlüce, 15km northeast of Lice in the north of Diyarbakır province.
La información está incompleta “Personal Communication” . Charles Häberl (2013)
La información está incompleta “Glottolog” .
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
0
The last speaker died in 1998. His daughter knows Mlahsö well, but is nearly deaf and has no one to speak it to (1999). Mlahsö was still spoken by a handful of people during the 1970s.
Qamishli town. Originally in Mlahsó and ’Ansha villages, Diyarbakir Province, Turkey.