- Van
Province in
eastern Turkey. Most
speakers now live in Israel.
Lishan Didan is
often referred to by
scholars as
Jewish (Persian)
Azerbaijani Neo-Aramaic...
-
Didan (Persian: ديدان) may
refer to:
Didan-e Olya
Didan-e
Sofla This
disambiguation page
lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the...
-
Didan-e Olya (Persian: ديدان عليا, also
Romanized as
Dīdān-e ‘Olyā; also
known as
Dīdān-e Bālā) is a
village in
Baranduz Rural District, in the Central...
- Resh
Shata (Lishan
Didan:
Night of the New Year) or
simply Lel
Shata (Lishan
Didan:
Night of the Year) is
celebrated by Nash
Didan Jews from
Iranian Azerbaijan...
-
Didan-e
Sofla (Persian: ديدان سفلي, also
Romanized as
Dīdān-e Soflá; also
known as
Dīdān-e Ḩoseynī) is a
village in
Baranduz Rural District, in the Central...
- and is
similar to
names used by
other Jewish Neo-Aramaic
dialects (Lishan
Didan,
Lishanid Noshan). It is
nearly extinct, with only
about 20
elderly speakers...
-
pattern or an
emergent shift ****ociated with
climate change. A. Huete, K.
Didan, T. Miura, E. P. Rodriguez, X. Gao, L. G. Ferreira.
Overview of the radiometric...
- לשניד נשן Lišānîd Nošān lit. 'the
language of our people', לשנא דידן Lišānā
Dîdān, lit. 'our language'
Pronunciation [liʃɑˈnid noˈʃɑ̃]
Region Jerusalem, originally...
- of Djerba, as Kan
Nadri U Kan
Nadri Bukhori as
Yakumin ki
medonad Lishan Didan as mani kyel ḥa (מַנִי כיֵל חָא)
Although it can
appear to be
simply a juvenile...
-
Samaritan Babylonian Palestinian Judeo-Aramaic Hulaulá
Lishana Deni Lishán
Didán Barzani Betanure Lishanid Noshan Targum Biblical Talmudic Palestinian Galilean...