Main Page | Alphabetical index | English Encyclopedia

Hulaula language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hulaulá is a modern Jewish Aramaic language, often called Neo-Aramaic or Judeo-Aramaic. It was originally spoken in Iranian Kurdistan. Most speakers now live in Israel. The name Hulaulá simply means 'Jewish'. Speakers sometimes call their language Lishana Noshan or Lishana Akhni, both of which mean 'our language'. To distinguish it from other dialects of Jewish Neo-Aramaic, Hulaulá is sometimes called Galiglu ('mine-yours'), demonstrating different use of prepositions and pronominal suffixes. Scholarly sources tend simply to call it Persian Kurdistani Jewish Neo-Aramaic.

{} ({})
Spoken in: {}
Region: {
Regions of the World
Antarctica | East Asia | Central Asia | Southeast Asia | South Asia | North Asia | Middle East | Levant | Arabia | North Africa | Central Africa | Great Lakes | Congo | Guinea | Sahel | Sudan | West Africa | East Africa | Southern Africa | North America | Great Plains | Central America | Caribbean | Andean States | Eastern South America | Northern South America | Western Europe | Eastern Europe | Northern Europe | Scandinavia | Southern Europe | Central Europe | Balkans | Australasia or Australia | Micronesia | Melanesia | Polynesia
(For more, visit subcontinent and subregion)
}
Total speakers: {}
Ranking: {}
Genetic classification: {}
Official status
Official language of: {}
Regulated by: {}
Language codes
ISO 639-1 {}
ISO 639-2 {}
SIL {}

Table of contents
1 Origin and use today
2 References
3 See also
4 External links

Origin and use today

Hulaulá sits at the southeastern extreme of the wide area over which various Neo-Aramaic dialects used to be spoken. From Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan Province, Iran, the area extended north, to the banks of Lake Urmia. From there, it extended west to Lake Van (in Turkey), and south onto the Plain of Mosul (in Iraq). Then it headed east again, through Arbil, back to Sanandaj.

Hulaulá is somewhat intelligible with the Jewish Neo-Aramaic of Lake Urmia and Iranian Azerbaijan: Lishan Didan. It is also somewhat intelligible with its western neighbour, the Jewish Neo-Aramaic of Arbil: Lishanid Noshan. However, it is unintelligible with the Christian Neo-Aramaic of Sanandaj: Senaya. Christians and Jews spoke completely different Neo-Aramaic languages in the same region. Hulaulá is sometimes called Targumic, due to the long tradition of translating the Hebrew Bible into Aramaic, and the production of targums.

The various dialects of Hulaulá were clustered around the major settlement areas of Jews in the region: the cities of Sanandaj and Saqqez in Kurdistan Province, Iran, with a southern outpost at Kerend, and a cluster in the Iraqi city of Sulaymaniyah. Hulaulá is full of loanwords from Hebrew, Persian and Kurdish.

The upheavals in their traditional region after the First World War and the founding of the State of Israel led most of the Persian Jews to settle in the new homeland in the early 1950s. Most older speakers still have Kurdish as a second language, while younger generations have Hebrew. Hulaulá is the strongest of all the Jewish Neo-Aramaic languages, with around 10,000 speakers. Almost all of these live in Israel, with a few remaining in Iran, and some in the USA.

Hulaulá is written in the Hebrew alphabet. Spelling tends to be highly phonetic, and elided letters are not written.

References

Main: Jewish languages
Hebrew
Biblical · Mishnaic
Ashkenazi · Sephardi
Yemenite · Sanaani
Tiberian · Mizrahi
Aramaic
Bijil Neo-Aramaic · Hulaulá
Lishana Deni · Lishan Didan
Lishanid Noshan
Other Afro-Asiatic
Judĉo-Arabic · Judĉo-Berber
Kayla · Kaïliña
Yiddish
National Yiddish Book Center
Yiddish Typewriter
Yiddish Theater
Yeshivish · Yinglish
Judĉo-Romance languages
Catalanic · Italkian
Ladino · Judĉo-Latin
Shuadit · Zarphatic
Judĉo-Portuguese
Other Indo-European
Yevanic · Knaanic
Bukhori · Juhuri
Judĉo-Hamedani · Dzhidi
Ural-Altaic
Krymchak · Karaim
Dravidian
Judĉo-Malayalam
Kartvelic
Gruzinic

See also

External links


Modern Aramaic languages
'''Jewish Neo-Aramaic languages
Lishanid Noshan | Bijil Neo-Aramaic | Hulaula | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan
Christian Neo-Aramaic languages
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic | Bohtan Neo-Aramaic | Chaldean Neo-Aramaic | Hertevin | Koy Sanjaq Surat | Mlahso | Senaya | Turoyo
Other Neo-Aramaic languages
Western Neo-Aramaic | Mandaic



Limit search to: Body and Title Deutsche Seiten Path



No Results Found


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org

Search for products at amazon.com:
Search:
Keywords:
amazon.com books on 'Hulaula language':
Search at Google.com:
Google
WebCalSky.com Encyclopedia

Im Artikel erwähnte Literatur