aramaic

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A subfamily of languages in the Northwest Semitic language group including (but not limited to):
Referring to the Aramaic language, alphabet, culture or poetry
A language in the Semitic language group
The language of the Aramaeans from the tenth century BC
The language of portions of the Hebrew Bible, mainly the books of Ezra and Daniel
The language of Jewish targums, midrash and the Talmuds
{s} pertaining to the ancient land or culture of Aram; of the ancient land of Aram
{i} native of the ancient land of Aram
The liturgical language of various Christian churchs: often called Syriac
The language of the administration in the Assyrian, Babylonian and Persian empires from the seventh to fourth centuries BC
{i} ancient Semitic language from which Hebrew and Arabic scripts were derived
The liturgical language of the Mandaeans: usually called Mandaic
The language of Jesus of Nazareth
A language in the same family as Hebrew, used in Daniel 2: 4-7: 28; Ezra 4: 8-6: 18 and 7: 12-26; and Jeremiah 10: 11; its square script replaced the Old Hebrew script in Hebrew manuscripts before the Christian Era
a Semitic language originally of the ancient Arameans but still spoken by other people in southwestern Asia
the Semitic language which was the vernacular in Palestine in the time of Christ, and which He Himself almost certainly used (Cross, The Oxford Dictionary Of The Christian Church)
The Aramaic language
Extinct writing system that originated in Syria
(air a MAY ic): The language of the ancient Aramaean people The language, also used in parts of the Bible, survived down through our Lord's time and into the seventh century as a written and a spoken language It was then gradually replaced with Arabic with the Arab conquerors Aramaic developed different dialects, divided into eastern and western Aramaic While on earth, Jesus spoke a western (Palestinian) form of the language *Syriac is a language related to Aramaic
an alphabetical (or perhaps syllabic) script used since the 9th century BC to write the Aramaic language; many other scripts were subsequently derived from it
One of the languages used by people in Jesus' time, probably the language that Jesus and the disciples would have spoken to each other
(air-a-MAY-ik) An ancient Semitic language related to Hebrew The Gemara was written in Aramaic, as is the well known Kaddish prayer
The language of the Arameans (Syrians), Aramaic was a west-Semitic tongue used in parts of Mesopotamia from about 1000 b c e The official language of the Persian Empire after about 500 b c e , it was spoken by the Jews after the Babylonian exile Parts of the Hebrew Bible were composed in Aramaic, and a Galilean dialect of Aramaic was probably the language spoken by Jesus
Pertaining to Aram, or to the territory, inhabitants, language, or literature of Syria and Mesopotamia; Aramæan; specifically applied to the northern branch of the Semitic family of languages, including Syriac and Chaldee
A language closely related to Hebrew, in which about 5% of the Jewish Bible was written
Semitic language related to Hebrew in which some parts of the Old Testament were originally written Thought to be the language Jesus spoke
of or relating to the ancient Aramaic languages
Aramaic language
Semitic language originally spoken by the ancient Aramaeans. The earliest Aramaic texts are inscriptions in an alphabet of Phoenician origin found in the northern Levant dating from 850 to 600 BC. The period 600-200 BC saw a dramatic expansion of Aramaic, leading to the development of a standard form known as Imperial Aramaic. In later centuries, as "Standard Literary Aramaic," it became a linguistic model. Late (or Classical) Aramaic ( AD 200-1200) has an abundant literature, both in Syriac and in Mandaic (see Mandaeanism). With the rise of Islam, Arabic rapidly supplanted Aramaic as a vernacular in South Asia. Modern Aramaic (Neo-Aramaic) comprises West Neo-Aramaic, spoken in three villages northeast of Damascus, Syria, and East Neo-Aramaic, a group of languages spoken in scattered settlements of Jews and Christians in southeastern Turkey, northern Iraq, and northwestern Iran, and by modern Mandaeans in the Shatt Al-Arab. Since 1900 persecution has forced most contemporary East Neo-Aramaic-speakers, who number several hundred thousand, into diaspora communities around the world
Biblical Aramaic
the form of the Aramaic language that is used in the books of Daniel, Ezra and a few other places in the Hebrew Bible
Hebrew Aramaic Scriptures
the Old Testament
biblical aramaic
the form of Aramaic that was spoken in Palestine in the time of the New Testament
aramaic

    Heceleme

    Ar·a·ma·ic

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    Etimoloji

    () From Aram, the place settled by Aramaeans; from the Aramaic ארם or ܐܪܡ (ʾarām).