Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialect of Betanure

Last updated
Betanure Jewish Neo-Aramaic
lišānā deni / lišā́n huðāye / huðəθ~huðəθkí / amrāni~amrāní
Region Betanure [1]
Native speakers
at most 3 dozen (2008) [1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottolog beta1257

Betanure Jewish Neo-Aramaic, the local language variety of Betanure in Iraqi Kurdistan, is among the rarest and most seriously endangered varieties of Aramaic spoken at the present time. [1] It is also one of the most conservative of both Jewish Neo-Aramaic languages and the Northeastern Neo-Aramaic languages in particular. [1]

Contents

History

In the 1940s, Betanure Jewish Neo-Aramaic was spoken by seventeen large families in the Jewish village of Betanure. [1] The community migrated in its entirety to Israel in 1951. [1] Ever since the dialect has been facing erosion from Israeli Hebrew and from other Neo-Aramaic varieties spoken in Israel. [1]

Phonology

Consonants
LabialDental/AlveolarPostalveolar/PalatalVelarUvularPharyngealGlottal
Plosive/Affricatep (ṗ) b (ḅ)t ṭ d (ḍ)č č̣ jk gqʼ
Fricativef (v)θ ð (ð̣) s ṣ z (ẓ)š ṣ̌ ž (ẓ̌)x ɣḥ ʻh
Nasalm ṃn
Liquidwn l ḷ r ṛy

See also

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jewish languages</span> Languages and dialects developed in the Jewish diaspora

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Northeastern Neo-Aramaic (NENA) is a grouping of related dialects of Neo-Aramaic spoken before World War I as a vernacular language by Jews and Assyrian Christians between the Tigris and Lake Urmia, stretching north to Lake Van and southwards to Mosul and Kirkuk. As a result of the Assyrian genocide, Christian speakers were forced out of the area that is now Turkey and in the early 1950s most Jewish speakers moved to Israel. The Kurdish-Turkish conflict resulted in further dislocations of speaker populations. As of the 1990s, the NENA group had an estimated number of fluent speakers among the Assyrians just below 500,000, spread throughout the Middle East and the Assyrian diaspora. In 2007, linguist Geoffrey Khan wrote that many dialects were nearing extinction with fluent speakers difficult to find.

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References

Bibliography