The Hebrew
Yiddish comes from German and other Slavic languages.
Yiddish is a Germanic Language. It is a Jewish dialect of Low German, that also includes many borrowed words from Slavic languages and Hebrew.
No, some Jewish people speak Hebrew and/or Yiddish. It is important to note that the Yiddish word for Jewish is Yiddish, so the language is actually called "Jewish", but there is no language identified with the English word "Jewish".
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you are talking about the 4-sided top used on Hanukkah, it's called a dreidel in Yiddish and a sevivon in Hebrew.Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish", but there are at least 5 other Jewish languages, unrelated to Yiddish, which also mean "Jewish", such as Judezmo and Yahudi.
There is no such language as Jewish. You probably mean either Hebrew, Ladino, or Yiddish, but this word doesn't exist in any of these languages.
There is no such language as Jewish. In both Hebrew and Yiddish, it's Shalom (שלום), with slightly different pronunciations. In Yiddish, it's also Hellaw (העלא), though this word is not often used.
There are dozens of Jewish languages. Here is Grandma in a few:Hebrew = savta (סבתא)Yiddish = Bubbe (בובע)Ladino = nonna, avuelaJewish Aramaic = savta (סבתא)
Yiddish developed as a fusion of Hebrew, Slavic languages, Romance language and Aramaic with German dialects. Origin of Yiddish can be traced back to the 10th century Ashkenazi culture in Rhineland which eventually spread to eastern and central Europe.Hebrew is used for the writing system of Yiddish and its Jewish-related vocabulary words.
"Shalom" in Hebrew. (Jewish is not a language unless you are referring to Yiddish, which is another category on this site.)
Well, that's a toughie, because there's no such language as "Jewish".-- The word for 'heart' in Hebrew is לב pronounced "layv" or "lev".-- The word for 'heart' in Yiddish is pronounced "harts" or "hairts".-- I don't know the word for 'heart' in Arabic or Ladino, the nextleading languages in Jewish communities through history.
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you meant Hebrew, it's zahav (זהב)Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish"; so yes, there is a language called Jewish. In Yiddish, "gold" is "gelt".
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you meant Hebrew, it's ga'ava (גאווה)Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish"; so yes, there is a language called Jewish. In Yiddish, "pride" is "shtaltz".