Fraternity Manuals

Juhuri language

From Open Encyclopedia

Image:Israeli blue Star of David.png
Jewish languages
Hebrew (eras)
Biblical · Mishnaic
Medieval · Modern
Hebrew (vocalizations)
Ashkenazi · Sephardi
Yemenite · Sanaani
Tiberian · Mizrahi
Aramaic
Bijil Neo-Aramaic · Hulaulá
Lishana Deni · Lishan Didan
Lishanid Noshan
Other Afro-Asiatic
Judeo-Arabic · Kayla
Judeo-Berber · Qwara
Yiddish
Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr.
Yiddish Theater
Yeshivish · Yinglish
Judæo-Romance
Catalanic · Judeo-Italian
Ladino · Judeo-Latin
Shuadit · Zarphatic
Judeo-Portuguese
Judeo-Persian
Bukhori · Juhuri
Dzhidi · Judeo-Hamedani
Other Indo-European
Yevanic · Knaanic
Judeo-Marathi
Altaic
Krymchak · Karaim
Dravidian
Judeo-Malayalam
Kartvelian
Gruzinic

Juhuri, Juwri or Judæo-Tat is the traditional language of the Juhurim or Mountain Jews of the eastern Caucasus Mountains, especially Dagestan.

The language is closely related to Middle Persian; it belongs to the Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. A similar, but still different language is spoken by the Muslim Tats of Azerbaijan, a group to which the Mountain Jews have sometimes been considered to belong. Speakers of Juhuri are called Juhuro, which simply means "Jews".

Juwuri have Semitic (Hebrew/Aramaic/Arabic) elements on all linguistic levels. Juwuri have Hebrew "ayin" (ע) sound while no neighboring languages have it.

In the early 20th century Juhuri used the Hebrew script. In the 1920s Latin script was adapted for it; later it was written in Cyrillic characters. Recently, the use of the Hebrew alphabet has enjoyed renewed popularity for writing the language.

The language is presently spoken by an estimated 101,000 people:

External links

MediaWiki GNU Free Documentation License 1.2