Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin: Difference between revisions
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'''Ăn Yidiș''' or '''Judeo-Gaelic''' (natively אן ייִדיִש ''ăn Yidiș'' /ən 'jitiʃ/ [ən 'jidiʃ], א קֿאילק'א (קיניִ) ''ă Ghăylģă (gîni)'' /ə 'ɣəjldʒə (gɨni)/ '(our) native language' or אן לשון-°מאָר' ''ăn loșăn-mhoř'' 'the mother language'; | '''Ăn Yidiș''' or '''Judeo-Gaelic''' (natively אן ייִדיִש ''ăn Yidiș'' /ən 'jitiʃ/ [ən 'jidiʃ], א קֿאילק'א (קיניִ) ''ă Ghăylģă (gîni)'' /ə 'ɣəjldʒə (gɨni)/ '(our) native language' or אן לשון-°מאָר' ''ăn loșăn-mhoř'' 'the mother language'; in-universe Hebrew: יידיש ''yidiš''; in-universe Standard Irish: ''Gaelainn na nGiúdach'' or ''an Ghiodais'') is the main vernacular of most major Jewish communities in Europe, the British Isles, Canada, the US, and Japan, in-universe called "Gaelic Jews" (''nă Yidîth Gelîth'') or "Ashkenazi Jews" (''nă hAșcănazîth''). With over 9 million speakers (most of them in North America), it is the most spoken Goidelic language in [[Verse:Apple PIE]]. It evolved from a [[Ăn Yidiș/Proto-Ăn Yidiș|Middle Irish dialect that migrated to Brittany]]. Ăn Yidiș is a possible answer to "What if Yiddish were Goidelic?" and is called "Yiddish" in in-universe English. | ||
On top of the inherited Gaelic vocabulary, it mainly borrows words from Hebrew and Talmudic Aramaic, but also from [[Azalic]], [[Galoyseg]], [[Thurish]], and [[Nithish]]. It is the Jewish language with the largest number of native speakers in Apple PIE. Among Judeo-Gaelic speakers, Hebrew (read with the Gaelic Hebrew pronunciation) and English are common second languages; Hebrew and Aramaic knowledge is required for Orthodox Jewish men. | On top of the inherited Gaelic vocabulary, it mainly borrows words from Hebrew and Talmudic Aramaic, but also from [[Azalic]], [[Galoyseg]], [[Thurish]], and [[Nithish]]. It is the Jewish language with the largest number of native speakers in Apple PIE. Among Judeo-Gaelic speakers, Hebrew (read with the Gaelic Hebrew pronunciation) and English are common second languages; Hebrew and Aramaic knowledge is required for Orthodox Jewish men. | ||