Lishán didán
The lishán didán is a language Jewish néo- Araméen, often called judéo-araméen, written with the Hebrew alphabet.
In the beginning she was spoken in the Iranian Azerbaïdjan, in the area of the lake Ourmia, of Salmas to Mahabad, i.e. in a zone where existed also a Christian population Assyrian speaking another alternative about néo-araméen, however mutually inintelligible. The majority of the speakers currently live in Israel, or they are call " Kurdes" because of their geographic origin.
The name lishán didán means " our langue" , of the alternative denominations being lishanán , " our-langue" , and lishanid nash didán , " the language of us-mêmes". This language is also called ic Targoum because of a long tradition of translation of Hebrew towards the araméen and manufacture of Targoum S.
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