• 6.9 Canada. 6.10 Religious communities. 6.11 Modern Yiddish education. 6.12 Internet. 7 Influence on other languages.
  • However, among traditionally multilingual Ashkenazi Jews everywhere, knowledge of Yiddish, at least as a second language, continues to be widespread.
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  • Jeffrey Shandler in Adventures in Yiddishland defines Yiddish not as a dying language but as one that has transformed into a postvernacular one.
  • His annual “Yiddish Summer Weimar" festival has grown to one of Europe's leading event exploring the richness and importance of Yiddish today.
  • 13.01.2003 00:31. labour of sisyphus. (bkz: yiddish kinder ).
  • Yiddish is a Germanic language with about three million speakers, mainly Ashkenazic Jews, in the USA, Israel, Russia, Ukraine and many other countries.
  • Yiddish uses an alphabet based on Hebrew. There are standards for transliterating Yiddish. Yiddish was criticized as a barrier to assimilation.
  • In a letter of gratitude, Tel Aviv University expresses its gratefulness to Dr. Mark Zilberquit, the president of the Heritage Projects Foundation (USA) and Yiddish...
  • There are currently about three million Yiddish speakers worldwide. According to the 2000 census, there are 178,945 Yiddish speakers in the United States.