Lachoudisch
Lachoudisch is a near-extinct dialect of German, containing many Hebrew and Yiddish words, native to the Bavarian town of Schopfloch. It was created in the sixteenth century. Few speakers remained after the Holocaust.
| Lachoudisch | |
|---|---|
| Lachoudisch | |
| Pronunciation | [lachodiš] |
| Native to | Germany |
| Region | Schopfloch, Bavaria |
Native speakers | <10 speakers |
Indo-European
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| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| Glottolog | None |
See also
References
Markham, James (10 February 1984). "Dialect of lost Jews lingers in a Bavarian town". The New York Times. New York.
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| Multiple languages |
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| English |
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| Arabic |
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| Chinese |
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| Dutch | |
| French |
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| French Sign Language |
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| German |
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| Greek |
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| Hebrew |
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| Italian |
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| Japanese |
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| Javanese |
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| Malay |
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| Portuguese |
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| Russian |
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| Spanish |
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| Tahitian | |
| Tagalog | |
| Ukrainian |
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| Yiddish |
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