• Undergraduates reading for a degree in Modern Languages can offer Yiddish literature or Yiddish linguistics as a Special Subject (Paper XII).
  • From the late 18th century most Jews remaining in central Europe gave up Yiddish in favour of German; it has now virtually died out.
  • "yiddish" başlığındaki entrylerin metinlerinde arama yapar.
  • Yiddish is spoken all around the world, and even if you've never heard of the language before, we bet you probably already know some Yiddish words.
  • Home page for The Yiddish Voice, a Yiddish-language radio show serving Boston's Yiddish-speaking community, and a Yiddish Internet resource page.
  • • Verterbukh.org: Yiddish-English & French dictionary online. • Speaking of Yiddish: some Yiddish words used in English, by Hugh Rawson (2013): I & II.
  • Yiddish definition: a Germanic language of Ashkenazi Jews, based on Middle High German dialects with an admixture of vocabulary from Hebrew, Aramaic...
  • [Yiddish yidish, Jewish, Yiddish, from Middle High German jüdisch, Jewish, from jude, jüde, Jew, from Old High German judo, from Latin Iūdaeus; see Jew.]
  • However, Yiddish words have heavily influenced American English,especially that of New York, and to a lesser extent have made it into Cockney.
  • In the 1940s, it is estimated that around 11 million people spoke Yiddish, according to the Center for Applied Linguistics.