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  1. Judeu-berbere. O judeu-berbere ou judeo-berbere[ 2] é uma língua que era usada por alguns judeus do Norte de África, sobretudo no sul de Marrocos, até ao final da década de 1950. Apesar de não haver provas históricas, pensa-se que é possível que também tenha sido usada por outras comunidades judaicas do Magrebe em épocas mais recuadas.

  2. An estimate from 1912 suggests that among the Jews of Morocco, 77,000 spoke (Judeo-)Arabic, 16,000 spoke Haketia, and 8,000 spoke (Judeo-)Tamazight (Lévy 2009; Beider 2017). Judeo-Tamazight was used as a second language by many Jewish men and women in hundreds of bilingual rural and semi-rural communities scattered in the High Atlas and Anti ...

  3. Judeo-Berber (a group of different Jewish Berber languages and their dialects) Austronesian languages. Judeo-Malay (Possibly extinct) Dravidian languages. Judeo-Malayalam (both written in local alphabets) Indo-European languages Germanic languages. Jewish English Languages; Lachoudisch (extinct) Lotegorisch (extinct) Yiddish

  4. English: Map of Judeo Berber communities This file was derived from: Morocco location map.svg Sources Benor, Sarah, et al. “Judeo-Berber in Morocco.” Languages in Jewish Communities, Past and Present, De Gruyter Mouton, 2018.

  5. Jews in Morocco, originally speakers of Berber languages, Judeo-Moroccan Arabic or Judaeo-Spanish, were the first in the country to adopt the French language in the mid-19th century, and unlike the Muslim population French remains the main (and, in many cases, the exclusive) language of members of the Jewish community there.

  6. Afrikaans; العربية; Aragonés; Asturianu; Bân-lâm-gú; Башҡортса; Български; Brezhoneg; Català; Čeština; Cymraeg; Dansk; الدارجة

  7. Language codes. ISO 639-3. None ( mis) Glottolog. None. Zurg, or Kufra, is reportedly an extinct Berber language formerly spoken in the town of Kufra in southeastern Libya. [1] No data seems to be attested for it, and it is described by Benkato (2017) as a "ghost language" that may never have existed. [2]

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