Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin/Ballmer
Ballmer Ăn Yidiș (locally ăn Yidiș oy Bală Mur or ăn Balămuriș) originates from the Eastern US city of Ballmer (from בּאַלא מאָר Bală Mur 'Big Village', Ḷbāḷdimōra in Palkhan; same location and same local pronunciation "Ballmer" /boəlmər/ as our Baltimore). It died out in Baltimore itself but is now the most common Ăn Yidiș dialect spoken in Japan.
Bellamoor Ăn Yidiș sounds like a Satmar Yiddish accent, in Ăn Yidiș but unlike Standard Ăn Yidiș it lacks "umlaut" of Proto-ĂnY *a before slender consonants, hence MIr baile > bală as opposed to Standard ĂnY belă. It has lost gender and mutations, but h- is added to vowel initial plural nouns and adjectives.
ă > o > u; u, î, ü > often i; /r/ is uvular; both l and ł are dark L and can even be broad Philly L. ie = Modern Wdm ie
mi, ti for Standard ĂnY me, tu
Nes tă Zie ni tosi crihi ă nyev 's 'n tal — v' 'n tal nyu-feyrmlță 's fulv, 's vă dochădis ă cidăch 'n tohim, 's v' 'n șpirăd a Zie ă snuv șģien nă hișģn — tă Zie ni ru: "Reyv suls ni bi un!" 'S tă suls ni bi un. Tă Zie ni feyç 'n suls, găr ma e; 's tă Zie ni zeli izărn suls 's 'n dochădis. Tă Zie ni tig eynm "la" dăn suls, 's 'n dochădis tu șe ni tig eynm "ayșă" du. 'S v' erăv e 's vă madn i, la eyhăd.
The present tense auxiliary תּאָ is pronounced tu when stressed (when a subject pronoun follows or when used as "yes") and t' or tă when unstressed (when a noun follows).