Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Yiddish (ייִדיש yidish or אידיש idish, literally "Jewish") is a High German language of Ashkenazi Jewish origin, spoken throughout the world. It developed as a fusion of German dialects with Hebrew, Aramaic, Slavic languages. Origin. Semitic language of Afro-Asiatic language family. High German language of Ashkenazi Jewish origin.

  2. The Rebbe explained that on the one hand the very reason that Yiddish, as opposed to ancient or biblical Hebrew, became the common spoken language was because Jews generally refrained from using Hebrew, the “holy tongue,” for common, non-holy, everyday speech. 4. Unlike other languages, the very words and letters of biblical Hebrew are holy.

  3. Yiddish vs. Hebrew (Courtesy of Yiddish Book Center)Contrary to what people might think, Yiddish and Hebrew are very different languages. The reason why the two are often linked in people’s minds is that Yiddish speakers have usually learned how to read Hebrew in childhood, since the Bible and Jewish .prayers are written in classical Hebrew.

    • Sol Steinmetz
  4. Apr 16, 2020 · In fact Yiddish has a lot of Hebrew vocabulary. So yes the two are similar in some regard, and as with any Judeo-X language, the Jews simply adopted the local language and sprinkled it with a little Aramaic and Hebrew. Yiddish vs. Hebrew Alphabet. Standard Yiddish is written phonetically for the most part, and is a lot easier to decipher than ...

    • Kojii
  5. People also ask

  6. The two best-known Jewish hybrid languages are Judeo-Spanish — better known as Ladino — and Yiddish. Judeo-Spanish was spoken by the Jews of medieval Spain, as well as their descendants. It received most of its linguistic characteristics from early medieval Spanish, but it was written in Hebrew characters.

  7. The most obvious is the fact that they use the same written letters. One difference is the niqqud (vowels) used in Hebrew are omitted for the most part in Yiddish. The consonants ע (ayin) and א (aleph) as well as variations of י (yud) to represent different vowel sounds. Because Yiddish is a mix of various languages, it takes on the grammar ...

  8. From its beginnings in the tenth century and until the end of the 18 th, Yiddish was the virtually uncontested medium of oral communication among Jews from Holland to Ukraine, from Livonia to Romania, as well as in the Ashkenazi communities in Italy, the Balkans, Palestine. Alongside Hebrew, it was also an important medium of literary and other ...

  1. People also search for