Languages of Syria
is the official language of Syria and is the most widely spoken language in the country. Several Arabic dialects are used in everyday life, most notably Levantine in the west and Mesopotamian in the northeast. Kurdish is a recognized national language.According to The Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics, in addition to Arabic and Kurdish, the following languages are spoken in the country, in order of the number of speakers: Turkish, Neo-Aramaic, Circassian, Chechen, Armenian, and Greek, none of which are official.
Historically, Aramaic was the lingua franca of the region before the advent of Arabic and is still spoken among Assyrians, and Classical Syriac is still used as the liturgical language of various Syriac Christian denominations. Most remarkably, Western Neo-Aramaic is still spoken in the village of Maaloula as well as two neighboring villages, northeast of Damascus.
Syrian Sign Language is the principal language of the deaf community.
Arabic
is the language of education and most writing, but it is not usually spoken. Instead, various dialects of Levantine Arabic, which are not mutually intelligible with MSA, are spoken by most Syrians, with Damascus Arabic being the prestigious dialect in the media. Dialects of the cities of Damascus, Homs, Hama and Tartous are more similar to each other than to that of the northern region of Aleppo. Allied dialects are spoken in the coastal mountains. Levantine Arabic has the ISO 639-3 language codeapc. Levantine has no standardized spelling, and is written in two main ways: using Arabic script from right to left and, less commonly, using Arabizi from left to right.Lebanese is similar especially to the southern Syrian dialects, though it has more influence from Palestinian Arabic.
Due to Syria's long history of multiculturalism and foreign imperialism, Syrian Arabic exhibits a vocabulary stratum that includes word borrowings from Turkish, Kurdish, Armenian, Syriac, English, French and Persian.
Other forms of Arabic natively spoken in Syria include:
- the dialect spoken in the Jabal al-Druze mountains;
- the eastern dialect group, part of Mesopotamian Arabic ;
- Shawi Arabic, spoken by sheep-rearing Bedouin;
- Najdi Arabic, spoken by the Rwala tribe.
Kurdish
is the second most spoken language in Syria. It is spoken particularly in the northeast and northwest of the country by the Kurdish minority. It is a recognized national language.Turkish
is the third most widely used language in Syria. Various Turkish dialects are spoken by the Turkmen/Turkoman minority, mostly in villages east of the Euphrates and along the Syrian-Turkish border. In addition, there are Turkish language islands in the Qalamun area and the Homs area.Moreover, Syrian Arabic dialects have borrowed many loanwords from Turkish, particularly during Ottoman rule.