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Home > Yiddish language


 

Yiddish (ייִדיש, Jiddisch) is a Germanic language spoken by about four million Jews throughout the world. The name Yiddish itself means "Jewish" ( German: Jüdisch) and is originally short for yidish daytsh (ייִדיש־דײַטש), or "Jewish German"; an older term in English is Judaeo-German. The language arose in central Europe between the 9th and 12th centuries as an amalgam of Middle High German dialects (70 to 80 percent of the vocabulary is recognizably German) that also borrowed heavily from Hebrew/ Aramaic terms found in traditional Jewish literature and from the Romance languages.

1 A German dialect?

Yiddish and German share a large portion of their respective vocabularies, and have reasonably similar grammars. It has been claimed that some German speakers are able to understand speech in Yiddish, considering it similar to German spoken by Slavs. These observations lead some observers to describe Yiddish as a dialect of German (like Swiss German) rather than an independent language. However, most linguists consider Yiddish and German to be distinct languages, pointing out that

The linguist Paul Wexler has even gone so far as to claim that Yiddish was actually originally a Slavic language whose vocabulary was replaced with German words, though this view is rejected by most other linguists.

Others point out that the distinction between a "language" and a "dialect" is sometimes blurry, noting that:



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