ydd ISO 639

ייִדיש‎ (Yiddish) Autonyms

Yiddish, Eastern

  • Geography

    IL Jerusalem district.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Israel

ydd
Judeo-German, Yiddish
ייִדיש‎ (Yiddish)
166,000 in Israel (2016 Y. Druckman). Total users in all countries: 371,657.
Jerusalem district.
4 (Educational).
Indo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Yiddish
Southeastern Yiddish, Mideastern Yiddish, Northeastern Yiddish (Litvish). A member of macrolanguage Yiddish [yid].
SVO; prepositions; noun head final; gender (masculine, feminine, neuter); definite and indefinite articles; verb affixes mark person, number; 20 consonant, 6 vowels and 3 diphthongs; non-tonal; stress on first syllable.
Periodicals. Radio. Grammar. Bible: 1821–1936.
Hebrew script [Hebr].
Non-indigenous. Southeastern dialect in Ukraine and Romania, Mideastern dialect in Poland and Hungary, Northeastern dialect in Lithuania and Belarus. Jewish.
OLAC resources in and about Yiddish, Eastern
Yiddish, Eastern
The number of people speaking Yiddish is decreasing substantially (2014 L. Moreno).
Major cities.
8b (Nearly extinct)
Elderly only. Shifted to Spanish [spa].
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Argentina
Yiddish, Eastern
Antwerp.
5 (Dispersed)
A stable language community.
Non-indigenous. Jewish.
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Yiddish, Eastern
No known L1 speakers in Bulgaria. Ethnic population: 2,200 (2016 World Jewish Congress).
Scattered.
9 (Dormant)
Shifted to Bulgarian [bul].
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
7,000 in Belarus (2017).
Widespread.
Northeastern Yiddish (Litvish).
6a (Vigorous)
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Belarus
Yiddish, Eastern
13,600 in Canada (2016 census).
Scattered: Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
San José.
7 (Shifting)
Shifting to Spanish [spa].
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
5,000 in Germany. Ethnic population: 49,200 (2000).
Widespread.
7 (Shifting)
Adults only. Shifting to Standard German [deu].
Non-indigenous. Jewish.
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Yiddish, Eastern
Major cities.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
A few hundred speakers. Ethnic population: 2,270 (2015 census).
Kauno, Klaipedos, Siauliu, and Vilniaus counties.
Northeastern Yiddish (Lithuanian Yiddish, Litvish).
8a (Moribund)
Shifted to Lithuanian [lit].
In 2007, Lithuanian Jews were making efforts to bring back Yiddish in nursery school and hoping to add it to secondary schools as well (2007 BBC).
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
2,000 in Latvia (2017).
Scattered.
Northeastern Yiddish.
8a (Moribund)
Shifted to Standard Latvian [lvs]. Some also use Russian [rus].
Non-indigenous. The Jewish population has declined significantly since Communism fell in the 1990s, and many Jews moved to Israel and other nations. Jewish.
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Yiddish, Eastern
600 in Moldova (2018).
Scattered.
Southeastern Yiddish (Bessarabian Yiddish).
8a (Moribund)
Older adults only. One-quarter to one-half of the community is elderly. Shifted to Romanian [ron].
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Moldova
Yiddish, Eastern
Major cities.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Panama
Yiddish, Eastern
37 in Poland (2002 census).
Major cities.
Northeastern Yiddish (Litvish), Mideastern Yiddish (Polish Yiddish).
8b (Nearly extinct)
Today’s remnant of less than 50 native speakers is a staggering loss from over 3 million speakers in Poland before outbreak of World War II. Elderly only. Shifted to Polish [pol].
Yiddish classes are offered at the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow, as well as Yiddish concerts and films.
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
640 in Romania (2011 census).
Bucharest county.
Southeastern Yiddish (Bessarabian Yiddish).
7 (Shifting)
Shifting to Romanian [ron].
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Romania
Yiddish, Eastern
1,680 in Russian Federation (2010 census).
Scattered.
7 (Shifting)
Shifting to Russian [rus]. Also use Georgian [kat]. Also use Tajik [tgk]. Also use Tatar [tat].
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Russian Federation
Yiddish, Eastern
3,000 in Sweden (2017 WJC).
Scattered.
7 (Shifting)
Shifting to Swedish [swe].
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Sweden
Yiddish, Eastern
3,100 in Turkmenistan (2002 J. Leclerc).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
11,500 in Ukraine (2017).
Scattered.
Southeastern Yiddish (Podolian, Volhynian). Many loans from Hebrew [heb] and local languages. Eastern and Western [yih] Yiddish have difficult inherent intelligibility due to differing histories and influences from other languages. (1977 M. Herzog).
7 (Shifting)
Adults only. Shifting to Russian [rus]. Shifting to Ukrainian [ukr].
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Yiddish, Eastern
156,000 in United States (2015 census).
Scattered with concentrations in major urban centers.
5 (Dispersed)
Most also use English [eng]. Also use Hebrew [heb].
Non-indigenous.
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Yiddish, Eastern
Scattered.
Northeastern Yiddish (Litvish).
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Uruguay
Yiddish, Eastern
Major cities.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
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