Yiddish is exclusively a vernacular language of Jews of Central/Eastern European descents (Ashkenazim). In addition to prayer and study of sacred texts, Hebrew as a written language had continuous usage to transmit information between Jews who had different vernacular languages (Judeo-Arabic, Ladino, Yiddish, Judeo-Persian etc.)
Will this help me improve my shitty Hebrew that I've never been able to learn :chomsky-yes-honey:
Probably not :)
:ooooooooooooooh:
But on the plus side maybe I'm good at Arabic instead :thonk:
That's the spirit
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Yiddish is exclusively a vernacular language of Jews of Central/Eastern European descents (Ashkenazim). In addition to prayer and study of sacred texts, Hebrew as a written language had continuous usage to transmit information between Jews who had different vernacular languages (Judeo-Arabic, Ladino, Yiddish, Judeo-Persian etc.)
Just wanted to read the Torah :shrug-outta-hecks:
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Based comrade piggy :palestine-heart:
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Not really, the scripts diverged early. Might help with Aramaic though.