Difference between revisions of "Neo-Aramaic"

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[[Category:Neo-Aramaic]]

Revision as of 15:31, 29 January 2018

https://www.ranker.com/list/assyrian-and-syriac-folk-music-bands-and-artists/reference https://www.atour.com/cgi-bin/dictionary.cgi?string=21575&Search_Field=Word_Address

Grammatical Descriptions (working list)

The neo-Aramaic dialect of Barwar. [1] 2008. Khan, Geoffrey. A 2000+ page grammar (with sample texts) of the dialect spoken in Barwar, specifically several villages along the river Be-Xelape.

  • All rights reserved
  • PDF online (at least right now...)
  • A variety of North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic
  • Glottolog lists this under resources for Assyrian Neo-Aramaic

The neo-Aramaic dialect of Qaraqosh. [2] 2002. Khan, Geoffrey. A 700+ page grammar (with sample texts) of the dialect spoken in the city of Qaraqosh, a bit south of the Barwar region.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)
  • "One of the most archaic dialects" of North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic [3]
  • Penn has it
  • Glottolog lists this under resources for Chaldean Neo-Aramaic

Chaldean language: Elementary course. [4] 1996. Jammo, Sarhad Y. Hermiz. Evidently a 55 page elementary Chaldean course, but I can't find much information on it.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)
  • The Library Network in Michigan has it. The real question is, can we get it through ILL?
  • WorldCat says it's in Chamorro...

Chaldean language: Elementary course (2nd edition). [5] 2008. Jammo, Sarhad Y. 31-page booklet with vocabulary lists and exercises.

  • All rights reserved
  • PDF online
  • Possibly related to the book of the same name (by the same author) above

The modern Assyrian language. [6] 1978. Ceret'eli, Konstantine. A book about modern Assyrian that seems to deal mostly with phonology.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)
  • Penn has it

A description of modern Chaldean. [7] 1974. Sara, Solomon I. 113-page book with information about morphology and word order.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)
  • Penn has it

The neo-Aramaic dialect of the Assyrian Christians of Urmi. [8] 2016. Khan, Geoffrey. ~2000 page description of the dialect spoken in Urmia, a city in the West Azarbaijan province of Iran.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)
  • Penn has it

Scientific Works (working list)

Discontinuous morphology in Modern Aramaic. [9] [10] 1993. Rubba, Johanna Elizabeth. A 500+ page dissertation dealing with issues of morphological analysis.

  • Probably all rights reserved
  • UC San Diego has it and that's the closest place

"Remarks on the historical background of the modern Assyrian language." [11] 2007. Khan, Geoffrey. A document detailing the history of the Neo-Aramaic dialects.

  • Probably all rights reserved
  • PDF online

"Stammbaum or continuum? The subgrouping of modern Aramaic dialects reconsidered." [12] Kim, Ronald. Paper that gives some insight into the situation with all the different Neo-Aramaic dialects.

  • Probably all rights reserved
  • PDF online

Corpora (working list)

(Khan's grammars all have sample texts, but not in the Syriac script. And the phonetic spelling he uses might not necessarily match what actual speakers use when they write it in Latin script.)

The Bible in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic. [13]

  • All rights reserved (presumably)

Assyrian Neo-Aramaic test wiki. [14]

  • Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

"The Christian neo-Aramaic dialects of Zakho and Dihok: Two text samples." 1995. Sabar, Yona. [15] Text samples from two Chaldean dialects in Latin script with translations

  • Probably all rights reserved
  • available on JSTOR

@jeanchedid19 [16] Twitter account of somebody who occasionally tweets in something written in Syriac script.

  • No license specified; all rights reserved by default

ܫܸܬ̣ܝܹ̈ܐ ܘܕܘܼ̈ܠܹܐ. [17] Enheduanna Publishing. Webpage in Syriac script, apparently with some people's bios, on an Assyrian publishing house's website.

  • No license specified; all rights reserved by default

"Appendix A to Part 92—Sample Notice Informing Individuals About Nondiscrimination and Accessibility Requirements and Sample Nondiscrimination Statement: Discrimination is Against the Law." [18] A sample nondiscrimation notice in Assyrian from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

  • Public domain, I think, because it's a U.S. government publication [19]

IRIB Assyrian Radio. [20] Website of IRIB Assyrian radio, all in Assyrian.

  • All rights reserved (presumably)