- Lishana Deni
Infobox Language
name=Lishana Deni
nativename=לשנא דני "Lišānā Denî", לשנא יהודיא "Lišānā Hôzāyē"
pronunciation=/liˈʃɑnɑ ˈdɛni/
states=Israel ,Iraq
region=Jerusalem and Maoz Tsiyon, originally from IraqiKurdistan
speakers=8,000
familycolor=Afro-Asiatic
fam2=Semitic
fam3=Central Semitic
fam4=Aramaic
fam5=Eastern Aramaic
fam6=Central
fam7=Northeastern
iso2=arc|iso3=lsdLishana Deni is a modern
Jew ishAramaic language , often called "Neo-Aramaic" or "Judeo-Aramaic". It was originally spoken in the town ofZakho and its surrounding villages in northernIraq , on the border withTurkey . Most speakers now live in and aroundJerusalem . The name "Lishana Deni" means 'our language', and is similar to names used by other Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialects (Lishan Didan ,Lishanid Noshan ). Other popular names for the language are "Lishan Hozaye", 'the language of the Jews', and "Kurdit", 'Kurdish'. Scholarly sources tend simply to refer to Lishana Deni as "Zakho Jewish Neo-Aramaic".Origin and use today
Various Neo-Aramaic dialects were spoken across a wide area from the
Zakho region, in the west, toLake Urmia , in the northeast toSanandaj , in the southeast (the are covers northernIraq and northwesternIran ). However, there is very little intelligibility between Lishana Deni and the other Jewish dialects. On the other hand, there is quite reasonable intelligibility between it and the Christian Neo-Aramaic dialects spoken in the region. The Christian dialect ofChaldean Neo-Aramaic is closest to Lishana Deni, followed by the less intelligible "Ashiret" dialects ofAssyrian Neo-Aramaic . Like other Judaeo-Aramaic dialects, "Lishana Deni" is sometimes called "Targumic", due to the long tradition of translating theHebrew Bible into Aramaic, and the production oftargum s.The upheavals in their traditional region after the
First World War and the founding of the State ofIsrael led most of the Jews of Kurdistan to move to Jerusalem. However, uprooted from northern Iraq, and thrown together with so many different language groups in the fledgling nation, Lishana Deni began to be replaced in the speech of younger generations byModern Hebrew . Fewer than 8,000 people are known to speak Lishana Deni, and all of them are over 50 years old. The language faces extinction in the next few decades.Lishana Deni is written in the
Hebrew alphabet . Spelling tends to be highly phonetic, and elided letters are not written.References
* Heinrichs, Wolfhart (ed.) (1990). "Studies in Neo-Aramaic". Scholars Press: Atlanta, Georgia. ISBN 1-55540-430-8.
* Maclean, Arthur John (1895). "Grammar of the dialects of vernacular Syriac: as spoken by the Eastern Syrians of Kurdistan, north-west Persia, and the Plain of Mosul: with notices of the vernacular of the Jews of Azerbaijan and of Zakhu near Mosul". Cambridge University Press, London.
* Sabar, Yona (1975). "The impact of Israeli Hebrew on the Neo-Aramaic dialect of the Kurdish Jews of Zakho: a case of language shift". Hebrew Union College Annual 46:489-508.
* Avenery, Iddo, "The Aramaic Dialect of the Jews of Zakho". The Israel academy of Science and Humanities 1988.See also
*
Aramaic language
*Jewish languages
*Aramaic alphabet External links
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=lsd Ethnologue report for Lishana Deni] .
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