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Topic: Chaldean Neo-Aramaic


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 Aramaic language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Palmyrene Aramaic is the dialect that was in use in the city of Palmyra in the Syrian Desert from 44 BCE to 274 CE.
Nabataean Aramaic is the language of the Arab kingdom of Petra.
From the seventh century CE onwards, Aramaic was replaced as the lingua franca of the Middle East by Arabic.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Aramaic_language

  
 Articles - Assyrian
Aramaic (also known as Neo-Aramaic) belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family, the Semitic language sub-family, and the Northwest Semitic language branch.
Aramaic as a spoken and written language is presently endangered, due to several forms of assault on its speakers in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey.
Beside local Aramaic vernacular forms, there is a literary language based primarily on the dialect used in the Urmia district of easternmost Iran.
www.free-biz.org /articles/Assyrian

  
 Chaldean Neo-Aramaic - Enpsychlopedia
Chaldean Neo-Aramaic is one of a number of modern Eastern Aramaic languages spoken in the region between Lake Urmia in Iranian Azerbaijan and Mosul in northern Iraq.
Chaldean Neo-Aramaic is the Sureth language of the Plain of Mosul and Iraqi Kurdistan.
Originally, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic was spoken on the Plain of Mosul, northern Iraq, but it is now the language of a worldwide diaspora.
www.grohol.com /psypsych/Chaldean_Neo-Aramaic

  
 Aramaic languages
Today, Biblical Aramaic, Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialects and the Aramaic language of the Talmud are written in the Hebrew alphabet.
Syriac language and Christian Neo-Aramaic dialects are written in the Syriac alphabet.
The use of Aramaic as a lingua franca throughout the Middle East from the 8th century BC led to the gradual adoption of the Aramaic alphabet for writing Hebrew language.
read-and-go.hopto.org /Aramaic-languages

  
 Chaldean Neo-aramaic Essays, Term Papers on Chaldean Neo-aramaics, and Research Paper Essay Help
Our Chaldean Neo-aramaic researchers are highly-educated specialists with impeccable research and writing skills who have vast experience in preparing Chaldean Neo-aramaic research materials.
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Since 1998, our Chaldean Neo-aramaic experts have helped students worldwide by providing the most comprehensive, lowest-priced research service on the Internet for Chaldean Neo-aramaic studies and coursework.
www.essaytown.com /topics/chaldean_neo_aramaic_essays_papers.html

  
 Ethnologue: Syria
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Suryoyo (see Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken cy Christians are often dubbbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
They use Aramaic in homes and as a literary and religious language.
www.christusrex.org /www1/pater/ethno/Syri.html

  
 Learn Assyrian (Aramaic letters, words, songs, and history)
Learn Assyrian (Aramaic letters, words, songs, and history)
Learn to speak the Syriac-Aramaic language through music.
www.learnassyrian.com

  
 CHALDEAN NEO-ARAMAIC
CHALDEAN NEO-ARAMAIC ( Chaldean, Kildani, Sureth, Lishana Kaldaya, Neo-Chaldean, Modern Chaldean)
www.christusrex.org /www1/pater/JPN-chaldean.html

  
 CHALDEAN NEO-ARAMAIC - LanguageServer - University of Graz
CHALDEAN NEO-ARAMAIC - LanguageServer - University of Graz
Alternative names: CHALDEAN, KILDANI, KALDAYA, NEO-CHALDEAN, MODERN CHALDEAN, SURETH, LISHANA KALDAYA, FELLIHI, FALLANI, KILDANEAN, KALDOYO
languageserver.uni-graz.at /ls/lang?id=2991

  
 Ethnologue 14 report for language code:SYC
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Jacobite (see Turoyo in Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken by Christians are often dubbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
Became extinct in the 10th to 12th centuries.
www.ethnologue.org /show_language.asp?code=SYC

  
 Ethnologue: Syria
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Suryoyo (see Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken cy Christians are often dubbbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
All dialects of Western, Northern, an Central Assyrian are spoken in Syria.
www.christusrex.org /www1/pater/ethno/Syri.html   (800 words)

  
 Lishana Deni - Encyclopedia.WorldSearch
The Christian dialect of Chaldean Neo-Aramaic is closest to Lishana Deni, and the less intelligible Ashiret dialects of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic.
Lishana Deni is a modern Jewish Aramaic language, often called Neo-Aramaic or Judeo-Aramaic.
It was originally spoken in the town of Zakho and its surrounding villages in northern Iraq, on the border with Turkey.
encyclopedia.worldsearch.com /lishana_deni.htm   (800 words)

  
 Articles - Senaya language
The city of Sanandaj is at the southeastern periphery of the area of spoken modern Aramaic languages.
The Senaya language is a modern Eastern Aramaic or Syriac language.
One distinctive difference between the two is the sound change associated with the Middle Aramaic fricative θ (th), often rendered as l in Hulaula, and s in Senaya.
www.lastring.com /articles/Senaya_language   (800 words)

  
 Assur Banipal Library - Syriac (Neo-Aramaic) Section
The following articles are written in Syriac (Neo-Aramaic), the language of the Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac people.
Syriac, is Aramaic with a heavy dosage of Akkadian words.
Akkadian being the language of our Fathers, the Babylonians and Assyrians of Antiquity who while adopting Aramaic around 800 BC, enriched it with their Akkadian language and created our current language, Syriac.
www.chaldeansonline.net /Banipal/Aramaic/index.htm   (800 words)

  
 Chaldean Neo-Aramaic
Chaldean Neo-Aramaic is one of a number of modern Eastern Aramaic languages spoken in the region between Lake Urmia in Iranian Azerbaijan and Mosul in northern Iraq.
Originally, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic was spoken on the Plain of Mosul, northern Iraq, but it is now the language of a worldwide diaspora.
The Christian dialects have been heavily influenced by the Syriac language, a dialect of Eastern Middle Aramaic, that became the literary and liturgical language of many churches in the Fertile Crescent.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Chaldean_Neo-Aramaic   (800 words)

  
 The Classification Of The Semitic Languages
Aramaic (also called Chaldee, Chaldean, Chaldaean, Chaldaic, Aramean and Aramaean, not to be confused with Armenian) is the language of parts of the books of Ezra and Daniel in the Bible.
Some scholars who believe in the historicity of Jesus Christ speculate that he spoke Aramaic.
Although Jewish Bibles have the Aramaic in Hebrew letters, anyone who thinks that, because he can read Hebrew, he can also read Aramaic, soon finds out that this is not so.
www.useless-knowledge.com /1234/may/article038.html   (569 words)

  
 Mlahso language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mlahsö is a Modern West Syriac language, a dialect of Aramaic.
Churches : Assyrian Church of the East · Chaldean Catholic Church · Maronite Catholic Church · Melkite Greek Catholic Church · Syriac Catholic Church · Syriac Orthodox Church · Antiochian Orthodox Church
It was traditionally spoken in eastern Turkey and north-eastern Syria by members of the Syriac Orthodox Church.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mlahso_language   (327 words)

  
 ASSYRIAN
ASSYRIAN NEO-ARAMAIC (East Syriac, Assyrian, Lishana Aturaya, Suret, Sureth, Suryaya Swadaya)
Assyrian (East Syriac) is the liturgical language of the Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East and of the Chaldean Church.
Assyrian International News Agency - Iraq - Iran - India
www.christusrex.org /www1/pater/JPN-assyrian.html   (61 words)

  
 List of 75 Languages of Iran
ASSYRIAN NEO-ARAMAIC \D IRANIAN KOINE (GENERAL URMI)\G Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Central, Aramaic, Eastern, Central, Northeastern \HUB Iraq \REG Reza'iyeh (Rizaiye, Urmia, Urmi).
Most in Tehran \POP 10,000 to 20,000 in Iran (1994) out of a reported population of 80,000 \BB 1852-1911 \NT 1846, in press (1999) \PR 1840-1993 \R The Assyrian separated denominationally from the Chaldean in the 16th century \WR Syriac script used \REL Christian (Nestorian) mainly \DAT 19/Jan/1999 \XXX AII
Assyrians in the USA report Mandaic speakers there, whom they call 'Yokhananaye' \PTO 800 to 1,000 \POP 800 to 1,000 speakers in Iran, out of an ethnic group of 5,000 in Khuzistan, Iran who speak Western Farsi.
www.everytongue.com /iran/all-languages.htm   (2896 words)

  
 the-lebanon.com :: Languages
Also includes Assyrian Neo-Aramaic 1,000, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, Kurmanji 70,000, Turoyo.
www.the-lebanon.com /directory/Country_Studies/Languages   (74 words)

  
 CENTRAL SEMITIC - LanguageServer - University of Graz
Languages: ASSYRIAN NEO-ARAMAIC, BABYLONIAN TALMUDIC ARABIC, BIJIL NEO-ARAMAIC, BOHTAN NEO-ARAMAIC, CHALDEAN NEO-ARAMAIC, CLASSICAL MANDAIC, HULAULÁ, HÉRTEVIN, KOY SANJAQ SURAT, LISHANA DENI, LISHANID NOSHAN, LISHÁN DIDÁN, MANDAIC, MLAHSÖ, SAMARITAN ARAMAIC, SENAYA, SYRIAC, TUROYO, WESTERN NEO-ARAMAIC
buti.uni-graz.at /ls/group?id=1037   (74 words)

  
 Articles - Lishana Deni
The Christian dialect of Chaldean Neo-Aramaic is closest to Lishana Deni, and the less intelligible Ashiret dialects of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic.
Lishana Deni is a modern Jewish Aramaic language, often called Neo-Aramaic or Judeo-Aramaic.
It was originally spoken in the town of Zakho and its surrounding villages in northern Iraq, on the border with Turkey.
www.lastring.com /articles/Lishana_Deni   (74 words)

  
 Ethnologue 14 report for language code:CLD
CHALDEAN, KILDANI, KALDAYA, NEO-CHALDEAN, MODERN CHALDEAN, SURETH, LISHANA KALDAYA, FELLIHI, FALLANI
The names 'Chaldean' and 'Assyrian' are sometimes each used in a popular sense to include both groups.
The ethnic group is distinct denominationally from speakers of other Northeastern Aramaic varieties; separated from the Assyrian during the 16th century.
www.ethnologue.com /show_language.asp?code=CLD   (170 words)

  
 Assyrian people - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The various groups and religious communities included under the Assyrians umbrella-ethnonym usually speak various Neo-Aramaic languages, including Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey) and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic (Iraq), which belong to the Eastern Aramaic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family.
This article is about the people variously identified as Aramaean, Assyrian, Chaldean, and Syriac.
Assyrian is also used by some Chaldean Catholics as well in Iran and Iraq.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Assyrian_people   (3178 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Bohtan Neo-Aramaic
Mostly Assyrian Christians, their language was a northern dialect of Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, but already somewhat more conservative than the standard Alqosh dialect.
The latest study of the language was carried out by Samuel Ethan Fox in 1999, showing that Bohtan Neo-Aramaic has retained many conservative features of Chaldean and Assyrian Neo-Aramaic which are not present in the standard Alqosh and Urmia dialects, but has also developed new features that are not present in other dialects.
Before the First World War, there were around 30,000 speakers of Bohtan Neo-Aramaic on the Plain of Bohtan, around the town of Cizre in Turkey's Sirnak Province.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Bohtan_Neo-Aramaic   (279 words)

  
 Lishanid Noshan
It is also unitelligble from the Christian dialects of Chaldean Neo-Aramaic and Assyrian Neo-Aramaic spoken in the region.
It is somewhat intelligible with the Jewish Neo-Aramaic languages of Hulaula (spoken to the east, in Iranian Kurdistan) and Lishan Didan (spoken to the north east, in Iranian Azerbaijan).
However, as similar names are used by most of the dialects of Jewish Neo-Aramaic, scholarly sources tend to call it Arbil Jewish Neo-Aramaic.
www.governpub.com /Languages-L/Lishanid_Noshan.php   (627 words)

  
 Ethnologue 14 report for language code:SYC
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Jacobite (see Turoyo in Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken by Christians are often dubbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
SYRIAC: a n extinct language of Turkey (Asia)
www.ethnologue.com /show_language.asp?code=SYC   (253 words)

  
 Ethnologue: Turkey
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Jacobite (see Turoyo in Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken by Christians are often dubbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
All speakers are bilingual in their national languages or local lingua francas, and some are multilingual.
www.arminco.com /hayknet/haylezu/turk.htm   (253 words)

  
 Phrasebase - Syriac Language Facts And Information
The Assyrian group (see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic in Iraq and elsewhere) separated denominationally from the Chaldean (see Chaldean Neo-Aramaic in Iraq) and Jacobite (see Turoyo in Turkey and Syria) in the Middle Ages.
Neo-Eastern Aramaic languages spoken by Christians are often dubbed 'Neo-Syriac', although not directly descended from Syriac.
This is just for fun, base your vote on factors such as ease of learning, ease of pronouncing, the sounds and tones, how appealing it sounds, how effective and convenient it is to communicate in and express what is on your mind.
www.phrasebase.com /languages/index.php?cat=319   (245 words)

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