Yiddish: Difference between revisions
Outlaw Sly (talk | contribs) |
Outlaw Sly (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox language|name=Yiddish|family=[[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Saxo-Syzkynic]]<br>- Saxic|scripts=Yiddish Alphabet|country=Araçana (recognized)|early-forms=Old High German, [[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Proto-Saxo-Syzkynic]], Proto-Saxic|usage=Native Language, Literary Language|endonym=ייִדיש ''Yîdiš'' ['jɪ.dɪʃ]|exonym=Ijidixia ['jːi.di.ʃa] (In [[Araçanic]])}} | {{Infobox language|name=Yiddish|family=[[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Saxo-Syzkynic]]<br>- Saxic|scripts=Yiddish Alphabet|country=Araçana (recognized)|early-forms=Old High German, [[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Proto-Saxo-Syzkynic]], Proto-Saxic|usage=Native Language, Literary Language|endonym=ייִדיש ''Yîdiš'' ['jɪ.dɪʃ]|exonym=Ijidixia ['jːi.di.ʃa] (In [[Araçanic]])|pronunciation=([[English]]: /'jɪ.dɪʃ/)}} | ||
Yiddish (Araçanni dialect: ייִדיש ''Yîdiš'') is a [[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Saxo-Syzkynic]] language spoken by a minority in [[Araçana]]. Much of the language's history is currently unagreed upon, but it shows clear influence from the [[Mary-Moldovan languages]] and from [[Hebrew]]. Yiddish has multiple standardized forms, including the one used by Araçana's Xeçha University and the recently discovered [[Inter-Dimensional YIVO Yiddish]]. | Yiddish (Araçanni dialect: ייִדיש ''Yîdiš'') is a [[Saxo-Syzkynic languages|Saxo-Syzkynic]] language spoken by a minority in [[Araçana]]. Much of the language's history is currently unagreed upon, but it shows clear influence from the [[Mary-Moldovan languages]] and from [[Hebrew]]. Yiddish has multiple standardized forms, including the one used by Araçana's Xeçha University and the recently discovered [[Inter-Dimensional YIVO Yiddish]]. | ||
| Line 113: | Line 113: | ||
==== Sound correspondences in Araçanic loanwords ==== | ==== Sound correspondences in Araçanic loanwords ==== | ||
The [[Araçanic]] sounds /s̪/ and /x/, which do not occur in Yiddish, are approximated with /t͜s/ and /χ/. A uvular | The [[Araçanic]] sounds /s̪/ and /x/, which do not occur in Yiddish, are approximated with /t͜s/ and /χ/. A uvular pronunciation of Araçanic /x/ is one of the distinctive features of a Yiddish accent. | ||
==== Consonant allophony ==== | ==== Consonant allophony ==== | ||
Latest revision as of 04:41, 4 October 2025
| Yiddish | |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | (English: /'jɪ.dɪʃ/) |
| Language family | Saxo-Syzkynic - Saxic |
| Early form(s) | Old High German, Proto-Saxo-Syzkynic, Proto-Saxic |
| Writing system | Yiddish Alphabet |
| Official status | |
| Spoken in | Araçana (recognized) |
| Speaker | |
| Endonym | ייִדיש Yîdiš ['jɪ.dɪʃ] |
| Exonym | Ijidixia ['jːi.di.ʃa] (In Araçanic) |
| Technical information | |
| Usage | Native Language, Literary Language |
Yiddish (Araçanni dialect: ייִדיש Yîdiš) is a Saxo-Syzkynic language spoken by a minority in Araçana. Much of the language's history is currently unagreed upon, but it shows clear influence from the Mary-Moldovan languages and from Hebrew. Yiddish has multiple standardized forms, including the one used by Araçana's Xeçha University and the recently discovered Inter-Dimensional YIVO Yiddish.
Phonology and Writing (Araçanni Dialect)
Yiddish is traditionally written with an alphabetic adaptation of the Hebrew abjad. Additionally, standards for writing using the Latin and Xudha alphabets have been developed in Araçana, as detailed below. Note that these are based on the dialect spoken there specifically.
Consonants
| Consonants of Standard Araçanni Yiddish | Latin and Hebrew Alphabetic Transcription | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labial | Denti-Alveolar /
Alveolar |
Palatal | Velar /
Uvular |
Glottal | Labial | Denti-Alveolar /
Alveolar |
Palatal | Velar /
Uvular |
Glottal | |||
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ[1] | Nasal | m מ (ם[2]) | n נ (ן[2]) | ň ני | |||||
| Plosive | p b | t d | k g | Plosive | p פּ b ּב | t ט d ד | k ק g ג | |||||
| Affricate | t͜s d͜z | t͜ʃ d͜ʒ | Affricate | ts ([2]צ (ץ dz דז | tš טש dž דזש | |||||||
| Fricative | f v | s z | ʃ ʒ | χ | h | Fricative | f ([2]פ (ף v וו | s ס z ז | š ש ž זש | ch ([2]כ (ך | h ה | |
| Approximant | l | ʎ j | Approximant | l ל | ly לי y י | |||||||
| Trill / Tap | r | Trill / Tap | r ר | |||||||||
Note that Yiddish is unusual among the Saxo-Syzkynic languages for distinguishing fortis and lenis plosives only with voicing, and not with aspiration at all.
Letters used only in Hebrew loanwords
The letters ב ,ח ,כּ ,שׂ ,ת ,תּ are used for the sounds /v/, /χ/, /k/, /s/, /s/, and /t/ in many loanwords from Hebrew. Usually, Hebrew loanwords are spelled as they would be in Hebrew, with abjadic conventions.
Sound correspondences in Araçanic loanwords
The Araçanic sounds /s̪/ and /x/, which do not occur in Yiddish, are approximated with /t͜s/ and /χ/. A uvular pronunciation of Araçanic /x/ is one of the distinctive features of a Yiddish accent.
Consonant allophony
/r/ is realized as a trill when adjacent to a consonant, and as a tap when between vowels.
/v/ is weakened to an approximant [ʋ] after an onset consonant.
Vowels
| Vowels of Standard Araçanni Yiddish | Latin and Hebrew Alphabetic Transcription | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front | Central | Back | Front | Central | Back | |||||
| Close | ɪ iː | u | Close | i י ī אי | u אָ | |||||
| Close-Mid | (ə) | oː | Close-Mid | ō או | ||||||
| Open-Mid | Plain | ɛ | ɔ | Open-Mid | Plain | e ע | o א | |||
| Closing | ɔi̯ | Closing | oi ױ | |||||||
| Open | Plain | a aː | Open | Plain | a אַ ā ײַ | |||||
| Closing | ai̯ | Closing | ai ײ | |||||||
| Syllabic Consonants | Syllabic Consonants | |||||||||
| l̩ | n̩ | (m̩) | (ŋ̩) | l ל | n נ | m מ | n נ | |||
Stress is considered phonemic in Yiddish. The long vowels ā ō ī are never found unstressedly, and so stressed short vowels may be indicated with a circumflex. The ə is found only through reduction of unstressed vowels, and is written the same as /ɛ/.
Because the phonetic values of vowels vary immensely across Yiddish dialects, examples of each vowel in Araçanni Yiddish are listed below for clarity:
- i: פּינגווין pîngvin "penguin" (Etymology: Russian пингвин)
- ī: טיך tich "cloth (singular noun)" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *dōk)
- u: שטאָט štut "city" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *stadi)
- ō: האוז hōz "house" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *hūs)
- e: העם hem "home" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *haim)
- o: וואלף volf "wolf" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *wulf)
- oi: הױפּ hoip "head" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *haubud)
- a: סאַוועמי sâvemi "pipe" (Etymology: Kozramva sawwami)
- ā: גלײַך glāch "even" (Etymology: Inherited from Proto-Saxic *galīk)
- ai: [3]אבדה avaide "loss" (Etymology: Hebrew אבדה)
Grammar
I can’t be arsed to write all this in my own words when it’s mostly the same as Real World YIVO Yiddish so here is a link to an improperly cited Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yiddish_grammar
There’s grammatical gender & stuff, often times loanwords from Araçanic are assigned a gender by analogy with existing Yiddish words in the same categories.