Senaya or Sanandaj Christian Neo-Aramaic is a dialect of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic originally spoken by Christians in Sanandaj, Kurdistan Province in Iran...
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speakers (1990s) Koy Sanjaq Christian Neo-Aramaic [kqd] (Iraq), 900 speakers (1990s) Christian Neo-Aramaic dialect of Senaya [syn] (Iran), 460 speakers...
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Neo-Aramaic. However, it is unintelligible with the Christian Neo-Aramaic dialect of Senaya. Christians and Jews spoke completely different Neo-Aramaic languages...
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Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, Hertevin, Senaya and Koy Sanjat Surat. Bohtan refers to the area between the Tigris and Bohtan river . The dialect mostly spoken...
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Hertevin is a dialect of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic originally spoken by Chaldean Catholics in a cluster of villages in Siirt Province in southeastern Turkey...
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Suret language (redirect from Chaldean Neo-Aramaic)
the varieties of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic (NENA) spoken by Christians, namely Assyrians. The various NENA dialects descend from Old Aramaic, the lingua...
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all of the remaining varieties of Neo-Aramaic languages before or in case they become extinct. Aramaic dialects today form the mother tongues of the Arameans...
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Syriac language (redirect from Christian Neo-Aramaic)
local Eastern Aramaic dialect that was spoken in the ancient region of Osroene, centered in the city of Edessa. During the Early Christian period, it became...
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rise of Aramaic as the regional lingua franca, a position the language retained until the 14th century. The Neo-Assyrian Empire left a legacy of great...
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Turoyo language (category Neo-Aramaic languages)
Neo-Aramaic adaptions and translations of Biblical texts, commentaries, as well as hagiographic stories, books, and folktales in Christian dialects....
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Assyrian people (redirect from Assyrian and Neo-Aramaic people)
variety of languages and dialects exist, including Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, and Turoyo. Minority dialects include Senaya and Bohtan Neo-Aramaic...
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to Syriac Christians of the Near East includes a specific group of ethnoreligious terms, related to various Semitic communities of Neo-Aramaic-speaking...
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Semitic languages (redirect from List of Semitic peoples)
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic Christian Urmi Neo-Aramaic Bohtan Neo-Aramaic Senaya Neo-Aramaic Chaldean Neo-Aramaic Koy Sanjaq Christian Neo-Aramaic Hertevin Neo-Aramaic...
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August 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2016. Geoffrey Khan, The Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Sanandaj, Piscataway NJ: Gorgias Press, p. 1. Sanandaj Archived...
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Syriac Christianity (redirect from Aramaic Christianity)
variation of the old Aramaic language. In a wider sense, the term can also refer to Aramaic Christianity in general, thus encompassing all Christian traditions...
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Syriac alphabet (redirect from Neo-Syriac alphabets)
from Classical Syriac Aramaic, the alphabet has been used to write other dialects and languages. Several Christian Neo-Aramaic languages from Turoyo to...
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Syriac literature (redirect from Neo-Syriac literature)
encouraged other colloquial Neo-Aramaic languages, like Turoyo and Senaya, to begin to produce literature. Mara bar Serapion (author of an early (1st century...
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Chaldean Catholic Church (redirect from Chaldean Church of Babylon)
the Syriac dialect of the Aramaic language, it is part of Syriac Christianity. Headquartered in the Cathedral of Our Lady of Sorrows, Baghdad, Iraq, since...
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classical, Akkadian influenced Syriac as its cultural language and Eastern Aramaic dialects as spoken tongues. Its main proponents in the late 19th century and...
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Assyria (redirect from Rise of Assyria)
Assyrian dialect of the Akkadian language went extinct, having toward the end of the Neo-Assyrian Empire already largely been replaced by Aramaic as a vernacular...
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Mlaḥsô language (category Neo-Aramaic languages)
Central Neo-Aramaic language. It was traditionally spoken in eastern Turkey and later also in northeastern Syria by Syriac Orthodox Christians. The Mlaḥsô...
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Assyrian dialect of the Akkadian language went extinct, having towards the end of the Neo-Assyrian Empire already largely been replaced by Aramaic as a vernacular...
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Assyrian culture (category Culture of West Asia)
Akkadian-influenced dialects of Eastern Aramaic, labelled by linguists as Northeastern Neo-Aramaic and Central Neo-Aramaic. They are predominantly adherents of several...
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Assyrian continuity (category Origin hypotheses of ethnic groups)
development of Literary Urmia Aramaic, a new literary language based on the at the time spoken Neo-Aramaic dialects. Through the promotion of an identity...
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Achaemenid Assyria (section Rise of Aramaic)
on leather, reflect the use of Aramaic in the fourth century BC Achaemenid provinces of Bactria and Sogdia. Aramaic dialects and written script survive...
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Liturgy of Saints Addai and Mari belonging to the East Syriac Rite. Its main liturgical language is Classical Syriac, a dialect of Eastern Aramaic, and the...
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Tur Abdin (category Geography of the Ottoman Empire)
community of Tur Abdin call themselves Suryoye, and traditionally speak a central Neo-Aramaic dialect called Turoyo. The town of Midyat and the villages of Hah...
28 KB (3,243 words) - 11:27, 19 June 2024
Osroene (redirect from King of Edessa)
(region) Diocese of the Orient The local Aramaic dialect. Segal 1982, p. 210-213. Ball, W (2001). Rome in the East: the transformation of an empire. Routledge...
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Post-imperial Assyria (section Neo-Babylonian rule)
to the Christian group of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, descended from the colloquial Old Eastern Aramaic dialects of the latter part of the Neo-Assyrian...
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Modern Hebrew (category Languages of Israel)
and the vernacular of the Jewish people until the 3rd century BCE, when it was supplanted by Western Aramaic, a dialect of the Aramaic language, the local...
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