Judeo-Gaelic: Difference between revisions

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[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Wordlist]]
[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Wordlist]]


In the [[Lõis]] timeline, '''Ăn Yidiș''' or '''Judeo-Gaelic''' (natively: אן ייִדיש ''ăn Yidiș'' /ən 'jidiʃ/ 'the Jewish language' or א גֿאָלג'־יידעך ''ă Gholj-Yidăch'' /ə ɣoldʒ 'jidəx/ 'Jewish Gaelic') is the sole surviving Goidelic language. It is called "Yiddish" in [[Verse:Lõis/English|Lõisian English]]. With over 10 million speakers, it is the main vernacular of the so-called "Galician Jews" (''năh Yidi Galțăchă'') in Eastern and Southeastern Europe. On top of the inherited Gaelic vocabulary, it mainly borrows words from Hebrew and Talmudic Aramaic, but also from Polish Azalic, Togarmite, Persian, Brythonic, Galatian, [[Đâu-Gequơrxi]] and [[Cubrite]].
In the [[Lõis]] timeline, '''Ăn Yidiș''' or '''Judeo-Gaelic''' (natively: אן ייִדיש ''ăn Yidiș'' /ən 'jidiʃ/ 'the Jewish language' or א גֿאָלג'־יידעך ''ă Gholj-Yidăch'' /ə ɣoldʒ 'jidəx/ 'Jewish Gaelic') is the sole surviving Goidelic language. It is called "Yiddish" in [[Verse:Lõis/English|Lõisian English]]. With over 10 million speakers, it is the main vernacular of the so-called "Galician Jews" (''năh Yidi Galți'') in Eastern and Southeastern Europe. On top of the inherited Gaelic vocabulary, it mainly borrows words from Hebrew and Talmudic Aramaic, but also from Polish Azalic, Togarmite, Persian, Brythonic, Galatian, [[Đâu-Gequơrxi]] and [[Cubrite]].


Its aesthetic is "Scottish Gaelic but more Romanian."
Its aesthetic is "Scottish Gaelic but more Romanian."