• 6.9 Canada. 6.10 Religious communities. 6.11 Modern Yiddish education. 6.12 Internet. 7 Influence on other languages.
  • Yiddish dialects are varieties of the Yiddish language and are divided according to the region in Europe where each developed its distinctiveness.
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  • It is a site related to all things Yiddish. It is trying to preserve Yiddish and Yiddish culture. They also have resources. keyboard_arrow_up. 0.
  • Language family: Indo-European, Germanic, West Germanic, Elbe Germanic, High German, Yiddish. Number of speakers: c. 1.5 million.
  • Alongside Hebrew, it was also an important medium of literary and other written communication (see *Yiddish Literature).
  • But Yiddish remains relevant for all those interested in Jewish history and literature written in Yiddish as well as those interested in Germanic linguistics.
  • Canadian World War I recruitment poster in Yiddish. The man being freed by a soldier says, "You have cut my bonds and set me free.
  • Yiddish is written in the Hebrew alphabet (vocalized version). However, people often write Yiddish in Latin characters in emails as a notable exception.
  • YIVO’s founding emboldened a highbrow Yiddish intellectual life that flourished between the world wars and soon used the new spelling as its hallmark.