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Journal of Semitic Studies 2007 52(1):1-20; doi:10.1093/jss/fgl034
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©The author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the University of Manchester. All rights reserved.

Articles

The North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic Dialects1

Geoffrey Khan

University of Cambridge

Aramaic still survives as a spoken language among some Christian and Jewish communities in the Middle East. The dialects can be divided into various groups. The most diverse group is that known as North Eastern Neo-Aramaic. Dialects of this group are spoken by Christian and Jewish communities. Many of these communities, however, have now been displaced and the younger generations no longer speak the dialects. The description of these dialects is of immense importance for Semitic philology. The dialects exhibit linguistic developments that are not only interesting in their own right but also present illuminating parallels to developments in earlier Semitic.


1It was for me a great honour to contribute to the Jubilee celebrations of the Journal of Semitic Studies and I should like to thank the editors for inviting me to give the Jubilee lecture, of which this article is an expanded version. The lecture was delivered on 16th November 2005.


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