0

Search results

It depends on which Jewish language you are talking about (there are dozens). Here are the most common:

  • Hebrew = ahava (אהבה)
  • Ladino = amor (אמור)
  • Yiddish = Liebe (ליבע)

If it's not one of these language, please specify from the following list of endangered or dead Jewish languages:

  1. Aramaic
  2. Bukhori (Judeo-Tajiki-Persian)
  3. Catalanic
  4. Dzhidi (Judeo-Persian)
  5. Gruzinic (Judeo-Georgian)
  6. Hebrew
  7. Hulaula
  8. Judeo-Italian (Italian)
  9. Judeo-Arabic
  10. Judeo-Aramaic
  11. Judeo-Berber
  12. Judeo-Portuguese
  13. Judeo-Marathi Marathi
  14. Judeo-Malayalam
  15. Juhuri (Judeo-Tat)
  16. Kayla
  17. Karaim
  18. Knaanic (Judeo-Czech)
  19. Krymchak (Judeo-Crimean-Tatar)
  20. Ladino (Judeo-Spanish)
  21. Lishán Didán
  22. Lishana Deni
  23. Lishanid Noshan
  24. Shuadit (Judeo-Provençal)
  25. Tigrinya (Judeo-Tigray)
  26. Yevanic (Judeo-Greek)
  27. Yiddish (Judeo-German)
  28. Zarphatic (Judeo-French)

1 answer


There are a number of languages associated with Judaism. The most common are:

1. Hebrew

2. Aramaic

3. Yiddish

4. Ladino

Here is a more complete list of Jewish languages, including some very rare ones, grouped by language families:

Semitic: Hebrew, Aramaic (referred to as Jewish Aramaic or Talmudic Aramaic), Jewish Babylonian Aramaic, Neo-Aramaic (dialects include: Lishanid Noshan, Lishanid Janan, Lishana Noshan, Lishana Deni, Lishan Didan), Judeo-Arabic (many dialects, including: Judeo-Iraqi - all are qeltu Arabic dialects), Judeo-Moroccan, Judeo-Yemenite, Judeo-Libyan, Judeo-Algerian, also several Judeo-Arabic dialects spoken in northern Syria and Iraq.

Berber: Judeo-Berber

Cushitic: Kayla (Qwara), Kaïliña

Germanic: Yiddish, Yinglish, Yeshivish, Klezmer-loshn, Judendeutsch (German in Hebrew characters which the Rothschilds communicated with), "Scots Yiddish"

Italic: Judeo-Latin and its putative descendants, the Judeo-Romance languages: Ladino, Shuadit (Judeo-Provençal), Zarphatic (Judeo-French), Judeo-Portuguese, Judeo-Italian, Judeo-Piedmontese, Bagitto (Jewish Livornese dialect), Catalanic (Judeo-Catalan), Judeo-Aragonese

Slavic: Knaanic (Judeo-Czech)

Greek: Yevanic (Judeo-Greek)

Indo-Iranian (Judeo-Persian languages and Indo-Aryan languages): Dzhidi (Judeo-Persian), Bukhori, Judeo-Golpaygani, Judeo-Yazdi, Judeo-Kermani, Judeo-Shirazi, Judeo-Esfahani, Judeo-Hamedani, Judeo-Kashani, Judeo-Borujerdi, Judeo-Nehevandi, Judeo-Khunsari, Juhuri language(Judeo-Tat), Judeo-Marathi

Turkic: Krymchak (Judeo-Tartar), Karaim language (Spoken by the Karaites of Crimea and Lithuania)

Kartvelian: Gruzinic

Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam

6 answers


Dilip Singh Judeo was born in 1949.

1 answer


There are many. Best known are Yiddish (developed by the Ashkenazim, European Jews); and Ladino, developed by the Sephardim.
Then there's the Tripolita'it of the Jews of Libya and Tunisia. And there's Judeo-Arabic, Judeo-Georgian, Judeo-Berber, Judeo-Malayalam, and Judeo-Krymchak. And about forty others which are still known of.

1 answer


Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp

There is nothing democratic about the Judeo-Christian tradition. The political tradition derived from Judeo-Christianity is tyrrany and authoritarianism.

Democratic concepts were derived from Hume, Locke and Hobbes.

1 answer


The term "Judeo-Christian" was created by Christians to reference their perceived similarities between Judaism and Christianity.

1 answer


There is no such language as Judean Spanish Arabic, specifically because there were not serious differences between the Arabic spoken by Jews and Non-Jews in Islamic Spain. There is Judeo-Spanish (also called Ladino), there is Iberian or Andalusian Arabic (although this is a dead language), and there are several major dialects of Judeo-Arabic (the most prominent being Moroccan Judeo-Arabic, Iraqi Judeo-Arabic, Egyptian Judeo-Arabic, and Yemeni Judeo-Arabic). Please clarify which language you are talking about.

1 answer






Dozens of Romance languages evolved from latin. Here is a partial list:

  1. Aragonese
  2. Catalán
  3. French
  4. Galician
  5. Italian
  6. Ladino (Judeo-Spanish)
  7. Lombard
  8. Occitan
  9. Portuguese
  10. Romanian
  11. Romansch
  12. Sicilian
  13. Spanish

Specifically though, the 5 romantic languages that you were asking about are Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian, and Italian.

2 answers


Judeo-Christian faith is one god; Greco-Roman faith had many gods.

1 answer


They believe in the Christian-Judeo God.

1 answer


The duties of and idividuale under Judeo-Christian faith were to love God with all your heart, mind and soul, and to love thy neighbor as thyself.

1 answer


The Judeo-Christian traditions greatly influenced the framers of the constitution. They held religious freedom and the fair enforcement of the law in high regard.

1 answer



Generally, belief in any deity or group of deities outside of Abrahamic tradition implies a disbelief in the Judeo-Christian God. As for an Abrahamic equivalent of Adevism, the fact that the word was coined by Mueller to apply to a special circumstance, to my knowledge it is unlikely a synonymous term refering to the Judeo-Christian God exists.

1 answer


These principles and concepts are called Judeo-Christian values. Much of Western society was founded on and still adheres to Judeo-Christianity.

1 answer




No they do not believe in a god, and certainly not the judeo-christian god.

1 answer



Yes remember and egoist is a person that cares about himself only and no one else. So that isn't stopping him from believing in Judeo-Christian-Muslim God.

1 answer


Judeo-Bolshevism is an antisemitic conspiracy theory that claims that Communism is a Jewish conspiracy. The Wikipedia article on the subject (as accessed on 8 May 2009) is quite good. Please see link.

1 answer


Judeo-Bolshevism is an antisemitic conspiracy theory that claims that Communism is a Jewish conspiracy. The Wikipedia article on the subject (as accessed on 8 May 2009) is quite good. Please see link.

1 answer


Since the first American settlers were what we call Native Americans, arriving thousands of years before the Judeo-Christian religions were created, no, they did not believe in the Judeo-Christian God.

1 answer


Pagan is one of non Judeo-christian faith.

1 answer




There is no such thing as a Judeo-Christian. "Judeo-Christian Ethics" is used by many Christians as an adjective to give the longevity of the Jewish experience to buttress much of their religious ideology which they may or may not share with Jews. Judaism came into existence between 4000 and 3200 years ago with the Divine Revelations to Abraham and Moses and Christianity came into existence between 2000 and 1700 years ago when the Apostles of Jesus recognized his Divinity and Sacrifice for Humanity.

Since no "Judeo-Christians" exist, there is no afterworld theology for them.

1 answer


Most Jews do not acknowlege the concept of "Judeo-Christian" since the two faiths have very little in common; however, the first Jewish code was the Torah.

1 answer



One fundamental difference is the belief in monotheism in Judeo-Christianity compared to polytheism in Greco-Roman religion. Judeo-Christianity emphasizes a single all-powerful God, while Greco-Roman religion involved worship of multiple gods and goddesses. Additionally, the Judeo-Christian belief system places strong emphasis on morality and ethics, guided by sacred texts like the Bible, while Greco-Roman religion focused more on rituals and interactions with various deities.

1 answer


Both Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian traditions incorporate legal systems and religious beliefs. However, Greco-Roman law focused on governing society based on reason and civic duty, while Judeo-Christian law emphasized moral and ethical principles derived from divine authority. In terms of religion, Greco-Roman beliefs varied widely and were often polytheistic, while Judeo-Christian traditions centered on monotheism and a covenantal relationship with God.

1 answer


Judeo-Christian is not a religion, but a cultural attitude that reflects the beliefs of both Judaism and Christianity, which is its daughter religion, although it has influences from Greek philosophy and pagan sources. Its principle feature is a conviction in the worth of the individual.

1 answer


Yes and No. Yes, Mizrahi Jews have several Jewish pidgin languages. No, Yiddish and Ladino are not among them. Yiddish is almost exclusively used by Ashkenazim and Ladino used by Sephardim who are not Mizrahim.

The most common Mizrahi Jewish languages are Judeo-Arabic, some Judeo-Amazigh dialects (that are basically extinct now), and some Judeo-Farsi dialeccts.

1 answer


The Classical Republican idea of civic virtue had to do with public morality, for the common good of the community, whereas the Judeo Christian idea was of private morality (inner faith and obedience to God).

1 answer



Only if you believe in the Judeo-Christian religious philosophy

1 answer


Those cultural elements common to both the Jewish and Christian faiths.

1 answer


From a biblical (Judeo-Christian) viewpoint, Satan is always referred to as a male.

1 answer


Frederic Manns has written:

'Bibliographie du Judeo-Christianisme'

1 answer


If you are asking for language names:

Japanese

Jaquela

Jatapu

Javanese

Jawi

Jèrriais (Jersey Norman French)

Jingbu, Jtaszdasoten

Judeo-Arabic

Judeo-Spanish

Juǀʼhoan

Juhuri

Jurchen

If you are asking for grammatical terms:

(There are none)

1 answer


The Maya civilization's religion features the story of Popol Vuh, which is startlingly similar to the Judeo-Christian story of the Garden of Eden. The Maya were a Mesoamerican civilization.

1 answer


no. Muslim religion comes from Judeo-Christianity. According to the Koran, the angel Jibril (Gabriel) revealed it to Mohammed. Of course, Judeo-Christianity comes fromZoroastrianism which does have some roots in Vedic Hinduism, so there is a connection of sorts.

1 answer


Some examples of Judeo-Christian faiths include Christianity, Judaism, and Messianic Judaism. These faiths share common roots in the belief in one God, the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament), and ethical teachings such as the Ten Commandments.

1 answer


Because the founding fathers beleived in judeo christian values.

1 answer


the introduction of monotheism,and judeo-christian values.

1 answer


Greek philosophies, Judeo-Christian thought.

1 answer