Judaeo-Romance languages
Judaeo-Romance languages are Jewish languages derived from Romance languages, spoken by various Jewish communities originating in regions where Romance languages predominate, and altered to such an extent to gain recognition as languages in their own right. The status of many Judaeo-Romance languages is controversial as, despite manuscripts preserving transcriptions of Romance languages using the Hebrew alphabet, there is often little-to-no evidence that these "dialects" were actually spoken by Jews living in the various European nations.
Languages
Judaeo-Aragonese
Judaeo-Aragonese was spoken in north-central Spain from the around the mid-8th century to around the time of the Alhambra Decree, which expelled Jews from Spain. Later, it either merged with the various Judeo-Spanish dialects or fell out of use, to be replaced by the far more influential Judeo-Spanish dialects from Southern Spain, especially in the areas occupied by the modern lands of Valencia, Murcia and Andalucia.Jewish Brazilian Portuguese
Jewish Brazilian Portuguese is a variety of Brazilian Portuguese incorporates Hebrew and Yiddish phrases. Sephardi communities also borrow from Ladino.Judaeo-Catalan
Judaeo-Catalan also known as Catalanic, was a Catalan dialect in Catalonia, Valencia and the Balearic Islands that was spoken before the 1492 expulsion of the Alhambra Decree. It is unknown when Jews abandoned the language. While numerous Catalan texts written in the Hebrew alphabet survive, whether or not they truly represent a dialect is debated. Some scholars, while conceding that the evidence for the language is scarce, still defend Judaeo-Catalan's status as a language, whereas other scholars deny such a language ever truly existed, or, contend that the evidence is too limited to take any position on the matter at all.Jewish French
Jewish French is an ethnolect of French spoken by 200-300 French Jews. Unlike most other Judeo-Romance languages, it is considered not to be in decline, but instead is doing well. It contains some influence from Yiddish and Israeli Hebrew, as well as from Judeo-Arabic introduced by Mizrahi Jews who moved to France after being expelled from North Africa. Today there exist both digital and print media in Jewish French. It is not descendent from Zarphatic.Southern Jewish French
This is a dialect of French spoken by 50-100 Jews in southern France. It contains influence from all three of the Judeo-Occitan languages particularly Judeo-Gascon.Judaeo-Italian
Judaeo-Italian, sometimes called "Italkian", a term coined by Solomon Birnbaum in 1942, has gone extinct except for one variety, now spoken fluently by fewer than 200 people. They speak the last remnant of the widely variant Judaeo-Italian languages spoken throughout Italy and Corfu and along the eastern shores of the Adriatic Sea and the Ionian Sea. The language may have had some influence on the development of Yiddish. The language is not as well preserved as larger Jewish languages like Ladino and much of what is documented was made to preserve the language. It had several varieties which were:Judaeo-Latin
Judaeo-Latin is a hypothetical language covering a range of geographical and register varieties of Latin. It is postulated to have been spoken in specific Jewish communities of the Roman Empire. A small corpus of Latin texts from the Middle Ages written in the Hebrew alphabet exist, but they are insufficient to indicate a commonly spoken ethnolect, and thus the existence of a veritable Jewish Latin language is pure conjecture.Judaeo-Piedmontese
Judaeo-Piedmontese was a language spoken by Jews in Piedmont, Northwest Italy from around the 16th century to the Second World War. It was based on Piedmontese, a Gallo-Italian language close to Provençal, with many loanwords from Classical Hebrew. Italian author Primo Levi, who was born within the Piedmontese Jewish community, describes the language briefly in the opening chapter of his book The Periodic Table. It went extinct circa 2015Bagitto
Bagitto also known as Judeo-Livornese was a dialect or slang used by the Jews of Livorno. Though extinct many works in it were written by Guido Bedarida. It contained many loanwords from Spanish, Portuguese, and Ladino.Judeo-Salentinian
A now extinct dialect of Salentino used by Jews in Salento and Corfu. The oldest text in Salentino is in the margin notes of a copy of the Mishnah from 1072 to 1073 known as Parma A which is in Judeo-Salentinian.Judeo-Roman
Judeo-Roman is the only variety of Judeo-Italian which is not extinct. It is moribund, and is spoken by 250 elderly people 200 of which are in Italy. There are groups trying to preserve the language. There is a theater groups called Chaimme 'a sore 'o sediaro e 'a moje makes plays in Judeo-Roman, some which are available on YouTube. There are also poems in Judeo-Roman by Crescenzo del Monte.Judeo-Mantuan
Judeo-Mantuan was a dialect of Judeo-Italian spoken in and around the Italian city of Mantua. It dropped the Italian e at the end of words. It is attested through several poems by a Jewish physician Annibale Gallico, made from 1876 to 1935.Other varieties
Other varieties of Judeo-Italian are:- Judeo-Modenese in Modena
- Judeo-Pitigliano in Tuscany
- Judeo-Reggiano in Reggio Emilia
- Judeo-Resan in the region of Reggio Emilia of Emilia-Romagna
- Judeo-Venetian in Venice
- Judeo-Ferrarese in Ferrara
- Judeo-Florentine in Florence
- Judeo-Torinese in Turin