The last of the Aramaic speakers

This discussion belongs to Translation news » "The last of the Aramaic speakers".
You can see the translation news page and participate in this discussion from there.

alex suhoy
alex suhoy  Identity Verified
Украина
Local time: 03:25
английский => русский
+ ...
Really brilliant. Jul 15, 2013

This was an absolutely fascinating article. Really brilliant. Thank you!

 
LilianNekipelov
LilianNekipelov  Identity Verified
США
Local time: 20:25
русский => английский
+ ...
Yes, it is very interesting, however, Jul 15, 2013

This article is not really about the last speakers of Aramaic per se, but of one of the Aramaic languages. Aramaic is sometimes considered one language, but it is really a group of languages, including Syriac. There are still at least a few thousand of Aramaic speakers left, if not more, and it is spoken by some communities as their everyday language, not just a sacred language, in Syria, and perhaps some other places as well-- a different variety.

 
Ty Kendall
Ty Kendall  Identity Verified
Великобритания
Local time: 01:25
иврит => английский
Even if it goes, it won't be completely gone Jul 15, 2013

It's unlikely all the various dialects will go extinct in the very near future, although I'm sure individual ones will. However, the geographical isolation of its speakers may actually work to its advantage, at least for a while longer.

Even if the worst case scenario occurs and all dialects go the way of the dodo, it will still live on in Modern Hebrew. The amount of texts I get which are littered with Aramaic words and expressions is not insignificant, so much so that I actually n
... See more
It's unlikely all the various dialects will go extinct in the very near future, although I'm sure individual ones will. However, the geographical isolation of its speakers may actually work to its advantage, at least for a while longer.

Even if the worst case scenario occurs and all dialects go the way of the dodo, it will still live on in Modern Hebrew. The amount of texts I get which are littered with Aramaic words and expressions is not insignificant, so much so that I actually need a rather healthy stock of Aramaic dictionaries at my disposal.

Aramaic also pervades everyday Hebrew (albeit usually in higher registers), not just the legalese I get.
Collapse


 
Simona Micutari
Simona Micutari  Identity Verified
Швеция
английский => румынский
+ ...
Wow Jul 17, 2013

Quite an interesting article to read! I can't believe I didn't even know that Aramaic had so few speakers left!

 
Inge Luus
Inge Luus  Identity Verified
Южноафриканская Республика
Local time: 03:25
Член ProZ.com c 2008
немецкий => английский
+ ...
Interesting indeed! Jul 17, 2013

Very interesting article - maybe the Aramaic dialects have a chance of "surviving" like Latin.

 


To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator:

Модератор(ы) этого форума
Jared Tabor[Call to this topic]

You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request »

The last of the Aramaic speakers







Trados Business Manager Lite
Create customer quotes and invoices from within Trados Studio

Trados Business Manager Lite helps to simplify and speed up some of the daily tasks, such as invoicing and reporting, associated with running your freelance translation business.

More info »
Protemos translation business management system
Create your account in minutes, and start working! 3-month trial for agencies, and free for freelancers!

The system lets you keep client/vendor database, with contacts and rates, manage projects and assign jobs to vendors, issue invoices, track payments, store and manage project files, generate business reports on turnover profit per client/manager etc.

More info »