Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin: Difference between revisions

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* vocabulary-wise, it's a koinéized mixture of different dialects, with the addition of some cognatized Irish words.
* vocabulary-wise, it's a koinéized mixture of different dialects, with the addition of some cognatized Irish words.


The Ăn Căyzăn accent has never been a natively spoken accent of Ăn Yidiș. 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. The most common spoken dialects today are Ballmer and Bohemian dialects.
The Ăn Căyzăn accent has never been a natively spoken accent of Ăn Yidiș. 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 dialect the other person speaks. The most common spoken dialects today are Ballmer and Bohemian dialects.


The inherited Gaelic vocabulary of Ăn Yidiș has historically been extremely dialectally uniform, because Ăn Yidiș arose from a founder event and spread rapidly over a wide area. Historically, Ăn Yidiș dialects mainly differed in accent, syntax, function words, and vocabulary (what Semitic and other loanwords are used).
The inherited Gaelic vocabulary of Ăn Yidiș has historically been extremely dialectally uniform, because Ăn Yidiș arose from a founder event and spread rapidly over a wide area. Historically, Ăn Yidiș dialects mainly differed in accent, syntax, function words, and vocabulary (what Semitic and other loanwords are used).