Yiddish
Jewish-German language that were common in German countries especially in Germany .
When Jews moved north of the Alps into the Rhineland, they developed Yiddish. Yiddish must have started as a pigeon language mixing Germanic and some French words with a smattering of Hebrew. The Jewish community of this era was literate, and as this language grew from a pigeon language to a creole language, they began to write it down. Later, as Jews moved east into Poland and Russia, a layer of Slavic loan words crept into Yiddish.
French is spoken in countries all around the world, from all over Africa to Canada.is very innacurate. French is an official language in France and some of what used to be its colonies. That is because they developed that language. That's like asking why English is the official language of America. We partially developed it and so we speak it. You will find that most countries who develop a language, unless they develop multiple (then its numbers that count the most), then they speak that language.
Jewish people live in most countries of the world, and they say hello in whatever language they speak. French Jews say "bonjour". English and American Jews say "hello", etc.
Latin was the language spoken by the ancient Romans and became the basis for the Romance languages, which are French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian. The word "romance" in referring to the languages and cultures of certain European countries, does not mean the hearts and flowers stuff, such as in the "romance" novels. It is an adjective derived from the word Roman or Rome.
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".
written language developed by the Aryans
how do jewish people say passover in their language
written language developed by the Aryans
In various places, Jews adopted the language of their host countries, adapted them to suit their cultural requirements, and preserved them for their own use, sometimes evolving separately from the original language. The Babylonian Talmud was transcribed in (Hebrew and) Aramaic, a common language of the area. Jews living in southern Europe around the Mediterranean Sea spoke Ladino, a Spanish-like language, adopted from the Latin-flavor languages in the area. Jews living Northern Europe spoke Yiddish (Jewish), which was derived largely from the Germanic languages spoken in the region.
Oracle is developed using C language...