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Yeshivish is an adjective/adverb used to describe the societal, cultural and linguistic norms and mannerisms of those who attend a yeshiva. This article primarily discusses linguistic aspects of the word Yeshivish. For the article about the culture, see Yeshivish (culture). This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Yeshivish is a form of English spoken mainly by English-speaking Ashkenazi Orthodox Jews who attend or have attended a yeshiva. Yeshivish is the primary vehicle of spoken communication in major American and British yeshivot. At present, only one serious study of Yeshivish has been made, Frumspeak: The First Dictionary of Yeshivish by Chaim Weiser. Weiser maintains that Yeshivish is not a pidgin, creole, or an independent language, nor is it precisely a jargon. He refers to it instead, with tongue-in-cheek, as a shprach, a Yeshivish word meaning "language" or "communication", derived from Yiddish, and from the German Sprache. The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
Languages Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, English Religions Judaism Related ethnic groups Sephardi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, and other Jewish ethnic divisions Ashkenazi Jews, also known as Ashkenazic Jews or Ashkenazim (Standard Hebrew: sing. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article is about the Jewish male educational system. ...
A pidgin is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups who do not share a common language, in situations such as trade. ...
A creole language, or simply a creole, is a stable language that originated from a non-trivial combination of two or more languages, typically with many features that are not inherited from any parent. ...
For the glossary of hacker slang, see Jargon File. ...
Communication is a process that allows beings - in particular humans - to exchange information by several methods. ...
Yiddish (ייִדיש, Jiddisch) is a Germanic language spoken by about four million Jews throughout the world. ...
Linguist and Yiddishist Dovid Katz describes it in "Words on Fire: the Unfinished Story of Yiddish" as a "new dialect of English," which is "taking over as the vernacular in everyday life in some ... circles in America and elsewhere."[citation needed] A dialect (from the Greek word διάλεκÏοÏ, dialektos) is a variety of a language characteristic of a particular group of the languages speakers. ...
Look up Vernacular in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Comparison with Yiddish Yiddish use developed among German-speaking Jews in the Middle Ages, diverging from German with the addition of words from other languages known to Jews. Yeshivish appears to have followed a similar path of development from English. In addition, Yiddish and Yeshivish each have native lexical and grammatical features not found in the languages they are primarily drawn upon. The Middle Ages formed the middle period in a traditional schematic division of European history into three ages: the classical civilization of Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and modern times, beginning with the Renaissance. ...
The development of Yiddish as a language distinct from German was probably aided by the fact that Yiddish became the spoken vernacular for Jews in non-Germanic countries. Yeshivish has not evolved into a separate language from English, perhaps for lack of sufficient time, and perhaps also because American Jews are more integrated into general society than their European forebears were in earlier centuries. Yiddish speakers and German speakers have some difficulty understanding each other although there is some degree of mutual intelligibility. Yeshivish speakers can understand standard English speakers, although the reverse is not always the case. Yiddish dates back more than ten centuries; Yeshivish, perhaps a few decades. Written Yiddish uses the Hebrew alphabet; written Yeshivish usually uses the Latin alphabet, although words of Hebrew or Aramaic origin are often written in Hebrew characters with English suffixes added using Roman characters. Occasionally, Yeshivish is written in the Hebrew alphabet using an orthography based on Yiddish. Note: This article contains special characters. ...
The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today. ...
âHebrewâ redirects here. ...
Aramaic is a Semitic language with a four-thousand year history. ...
There do not seem to be any native speakers of Yeshivish to the degree that it is spoken in yeshivot. While children certainly do pick up Yeshivish terms and patterns of speech from parents, there is no evidence of any two-year olds, for example, who speak as do yeshiva students. In addition, Yeshivish is primarily a male spoken dialect, as documented in "Talmid Chachams and Tsedeykeses: Language, Learnedness, and Masculinity Among Orthodox Jews," by Sarah Bunin Benor Jewish Social Studies; Fall2004, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p147-170. Fathers and sons might speak Yeshivish, particularly of teenage years and above, while mothers and daughters generally do not. Some observers predict that Yeshivish may develop further to the point that it could become one of the historical Judeo-hybrid languages like Yiddish, Ladino or Judeo-Arabic. The Judeo-hybrid languages were spoken dialects which mixed elements of the local vernacular, Hebrew, Aramaic and Jewish religious idioms. As Yiddish was to Middle High German, Yeshivish may be to Standard American English. However, the integration of modern-day Jews with non-Jews may keep their speech from diverging as far from the standard language as it did in the past. Ladino is a Romance language, derived mainly from Old Castilian (Spanish), Hebrew, Turkish and some French and Greek. ...
Categories: Language stubs | Judaism-related stubs | Mizrahi Jews | Arab | Arabic languages | Jewish languages ...
Middle High German (MHG, German Mittelhochdeutsch) is the term used for the period in the history of the German language between 1050 and 1350. ...
Interestingly enough, Israeli Haredim have not developed any language or dialect comparable to Yeshivish. They generally speak standard Israeli Hebrew or standard Yiddish. However, many Israeli Haredim speak mostly modern Hebrew, but use Ashkenazic pronunciations when speaking of "Jewish" words, such as "Shabbos", rather than "Shabbat", or "Toireh" rather than "Torah". Haredi Judaism, or Charedi Judaism, also called ultra-Orthodox Judaism, is the most theologically conservative form of Orthodox Judaism. ...
âHebrewâ redirects here. ...
Vocabulary The vocabulary of Yeshivish is drawn primarily from English, although it includes terms from other languages, especially Hebrew, Yiddish, and Aramaic. It is similar to Yinglish, except with more words from other languages and with many Talmudic phrases. The preposition "by" can be used in Yeshivish where "at," "among," "beside," and "with" would be required in English, as in "I ate by my brother last night." This use of "by" is simply a transference of the meaning of the Yiddish word "bay" (German: "bei") to the Yeshivish context in English. The Modern Hebrew language is a Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic language family. ...
Aramaic is a Semitic language with a four-thousand year history. ...
Yinglish words are neologisms created by speakers of Yiddish in English-speaking countries, sometimes to describe things that were uncommon in the old country. ...
The first page of the Vilna Edition of the Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Berachot, folio 2a. ...
Grammar In general, the grammar of Yeshivish is English grammar. Thus, a non-Yeshivish English-speaker who hears a Yeshivish sentence will perceive a normal English sentence with unknown vocabulary words as the "ikar" (most important [part]) of the sentence. The English is used to set the sentence structure with the Yiddish, Hebrew, or Aramaic words used to fill in the blanks. This often leads to words of non-English origin being given plurals and verb tenses inconsistent with their language of origin. Most often, the singular form of a Yeshivish noun becomes a plural by adding an "s" to it, as in English, even when the base word is not an English one. Thus, the plural of "yeshiva" is "yeshivas," not "yeshivos" or "yeshivot" (although these may be corruptions of the Hebrew plural where -os becomes -as due to its similarlity to English plurals).
Verbs in past tense ("I already davened mincha.") or present ("Quiet, I'm davening.") are commonly used, even though these verbs (daven = "to pray") are not of English origin. Jewish services are the prayers recited as part of observance of Judaism. ...
Some verbs, particularly those of Hebrew origin, are often treated as participles, and inflected by English auxiliary verbs, in the same way that "periphrastic verbs" are constructed in Yiddish. Thus, for example: - "He was moide that he was wrong."
- "He was" puts "moide" -- "to admit" -- into the third-person singular past tense, creating the present meaning of "He admitted that he was wrong."
- "We'll always be soimech on Rav Plony's p'sak that the eruv is mutar."
- "We'll always be" puts "soimech" -- "to rely" -- into the first-person plural future tense, creating the present meaning of "We'll always rely upon Rabbi So-and-So's ruling that the eruv is permitted."
Sentence structure is slightly different in Yeshivish than in English. Take for example the sentence "I threw my mother out the window, a towel." A yeshivish speaker will immediately understand that the towel was thrown to the mother, who was outside the window. Eruv (â, also spelt Eiruv or Erub, plural: Eruvin) is a Hebrew word meaning mixture, and refers to any of three procedures which allow certain activities in Jewish law which would otherwise be forbidden. ...
For a more in-depth discussion of Yeshivish grammar, consult the explanation "The Grammar of Yeshivish," found at the start of Weiser's dictionary (see reference below).
Hebrew Yeshivish While much emphasis has been placed on Yiddish/English Yeshivish vernacular, appropriate focus should also be placed on the Hebrew-Yiddish Yeshivish. While Yeshivish is the spoken language in most American Yeshivos with a modern twist, there has been a great shift and drive to speak Yiddish. In many of these communities, only basic Yiddish and Hebrew words are known, thus a creole of Yiddish, Hebrew, and Aramaic is formed, for example, a speaker of Yeshivish-Hebrew may say "Geb mir der chavilah fun beitzim, un ich vell zey mevashel zain" (=Give me the egg carton, and I will cook them) in which the words "Geb, mir, der, fun, un, ich, vell, zey" meanining Give, Me, The(se), From, And, I, Will, Them; respectively. While Yiddish is partly comprised of Hebrew, these terms are not part of standard Yiddish, and "Mevashel" - in Hebrew meaning "Will Cook" is ungrammatical in standard yiddish, (in which the correct form would be "Ich vell zay kochen (or Brien, or Baken). Editing needed
References - Weiser, Chaim M (1995). Frumspeak: The first dictionary of Yeshivish. Northvale: Aronson. ISBN 1-56821-614-9.
See also This article is about the Jewish male educational system. ...
Yinglish words are neologisms created by speakers of Yiddish in English-speaking countries, sometimes to describe things that were uncommon in the old country. ...
Argot (French for slang) is primarily slang used by various groups, including but not limited to thieves and other criminals, to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations. ...
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