Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin: Difference between revisions
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* grammatically based on the late 19th century Hasidic dialect which was spoken in our Czechia but nudged a bit closer to Irish and Mishnaic Hebrew grammar (read: close to our Scottish Gaelic but simplified a little) | * grammatically based on the late 19th century Hasidic dialect which was spoken in our Czechia but nudged a bit closer to Irish and Mishnaic Hebrew grammar (read: close to our Scottish Gaelic but simplified a little) | ||
* orthographically it's diaphonemic to the extent possible, i.e. Proto-Ăn Yidiș vowels are respected unless it would cause the writing to be un-phonemic according to the Ăn Căyzăn accent. | * orthographically it's diaphonemic to the extent possible, i.e. Proto-Ăn Yidiș vowels are respected unless it would cause the writing to be un-phonemic according to the Ăn Căyzăn accent. | ||
* vocabulary-wise, it's a koinéized mixture of different dialects, with the addition of some | * vocabulary-wise, it's a koinéized mixture of different dialects, with the addition of some hypothetical cognates of Irish words. | ||
The Ăn Căyzăn accent has not been a natively spoken accent of Ăn Yidiș before. Formal written Ăn Yidiș, which is used e.g. in novels, newspapers, or communal records, follows Ăn Căyzăn closely, but most speakers speak another variety and read the formal written language in their native accent. Ăn Căyzăn is also used when speakers of different Ăn Yidiș dialects speak with each other or when you don't know what The most common spoken dialects today are Ballmer and Bohemian dialects (mainly spoken in Haredi communities) and Modern Ăn Căyzon (spoken by secular Ăn Yidiș speakers). | The Ăn Căyzăn accent has not been a natively spoken accent of Ăn Yidiș before. Formal written Ăn Yidiș, which is used e.g. in novels, newspapers, or communal records, follows Ăn Căyzăn closely, but most speakers speak another variety and read the formal written language in their native accent. Ăn Căyzăn is also used when speakers of different Ăn Yidiș dialects speak with each other or when you don't know what The most common spoken dialects today are Ballmer and Bohemian dialects (mainly spoken in Haredi communities) and Modern Ăn Căyzon (spoken by secular Ăn Yidiș speakers). | ||