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Copyright

Lidia Napiorkowska;

Published On

2025-03-07

Page Range

pp. 791–822

Language

  • English

Print Length

32 pages

Relating Morphological and Sociolinguistic Variety in Modern Hebrew to Neo-Aramaic

  • Lidia Napiorkowska (author)
The article compares spoken Modern Hebrew and North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic dialects, highlighting parallels in verbal morphology and sociolinguistic diversity. Both languages exhibit variation influenced by geographic, social, and pragmatic factors. Neo-Aramaic, shaped by contact with regional languages, displays dialectal distinctions between rural and urban communities, often aligning with religious affiliation. Modern Hebrew, revived as a vernacular in the nineteenth century, shows variation driven by register, fluency, and context. The study analyses specific morphological shifts, such as the merging of verbal classes and the loss of gutturals, observing typological similarities in their evolution as modern spoken Semitic languages. These developments reflect shared trends in phonological simplification and morphosyntactic reorganisation, while preserving elements of their Semitic roots.

Contributors

Lidia Napiorkowska

(author)
Lecturer in Hebrew at University of Warsaw

Lidia Napiorkowska (PhD, University of Cambridge) is a lecturer in Hebrew in the Faculty of Oriental Studies, Warsaw University, where she focuses on the linguistic aspects of Semitic languages, particularly Modern Hebrew and Neo-Aramaic. Her current research includes exploring the endangered varieties of North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic, especially the Christian dialects from north-eastern Iraq. Her monographs include A Grammar of the Christian Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Diyana-Zariwaw (Brill, 2015) and (co-edited with Geoffrey Khan) Neo-Aramaic and Its Linguistic Context (Gorgias, 2015).