Paul Wexler has written: 'Explorations in Judeo-Slavic linguistics' -- subject(s): Languages, Jews 'Three heirs to a Judeo-Latin legacy' -- subject(s): History, Languages, Yiddish language, Jews, Ladino language 'The non-Jewish origins of the Sephardic Jews' -- subject(s): Arabic, Berbers, Ethnic relations, Foreign elements, History, Jewish Proselytes and proselyting, Jews, Ladino language, Origin, Proselytes and proselyting, Jewish, Sephardim, Social life and customs 'Explorations in Judeo-Slavic Linguistics (Contributions to the Sociology of Jewish Languages, Vol 2)' 'Jewish and Non-Jewish creators of \\' -- subject(s): Languages, OUR Brockhaus selection, Jews, Other Germanic Languages, History
There are dozens of Jewish languages. Here is Grandma in a few:Hebrew = savta (סבתא)Yiddish = Bubbe (בובע)Ladino = nonna, avuelaJewish Aramaic = savta (סבתא)
Most of the books of the Hebrew Bible were written in Hebrew (עברית), with the exception of the books of Daniel and Ezra which were written in Jewish Aramaic (ארמית), a language very closely related to Hebrew. The books of the New Testament were written entirely in Koine Greek (Ελληνιστική Κοινή).
There are approximately 7,000 written languages in the world.
The most common Jewish languages are:HebrewJewish AramaicYiddishLadinoJudeo-ArabicJudeo-BerberKayla (Qwara)KaïliñaYeshivishKlezmer-loshnScots YiddishShuaditZarphaticBagittoCatalanicKnaanicYevanic (Judeo-Greek)DzhidiBukhoriJuhuri languageKrymchakKaraim languageGruzinicHere is list of all Jewish languages, including those that are extinct: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_diaspora_languages
All of the languages of France are written as well as spoken, with the exception of the sign languages. For more information about the languages of France, click here.
Edward Stankiewicz has written: 'My war' -- subject(s): Biography, Buchenwald (Concentration camp), Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jews, Personal narratives 'Bandouin de Courtenay and the foundations of structural linguistics' 'The accentual patterns of the Slavic languages' -- subject(s): Accents and accentuation, Slavic languages 'The Slavic languages' -- subject(s): Grammar, History, Phonology, Slavic languages, Typology (Linguistics)
There's actually no such language as "Jewish". Also, names only have meanings in the languages they originate from.
In theory, it can be written in any of the 6,809 languages of the world, but most of those languages use the same written number system.
Jewish refers to the people who follow the religion of Judaism. There's no such thing as "Jewish talk". If you want to know what languages are associated with the Jewish people, they are: Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, and Aramaic.
Robert Henry Codrington has written: 'The Melanesian languages' -- subject(s): Melanesian languages 'The Melanesian languages' -- subject(s): Melanesian languages
Operas have been written in most all languages on Earth, primarily the European, Asian and English languages.