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Aramaic language |
Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia | 0.09 sec. |
Aramaic languageSemitic language of the Hamito-Semitic family of western Asia, the everyday language of Palestine 2,000 years ago, during the Roman occupation and the time of Jesus. In the 13th century BC Aramaean nomads set up states in Mesopotamia, and during the next 200 years spread into northern Syria, where Damascus, Aleppo, and Carchemish were among their chief centres. Aramaic spread throughout Syria and Mesopotamia, becoming one of the official languages of the Persian empire under the Achaemenids and serving as a lingua franca of the day. Aramaic dialects survive among small Christian communities in various parts of western Asia, although Arabic spread widely with the acceptance of Islam. |
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``After 9-11, we definitely saw a rise in students who wanted to take Arabic, so there was a positive there,'' said Yona Sabar, professor of Hebrew and Aramaic languages at the University of California, Los Angeles, who also is a native speaker of the language. The Aramaic language of Jesus has survived in their liturgy. Christians of the Holy Land are of many different origins: Jews, Syrians or Arameans (whose Aramaic language was spoken by Jesus and still survives today in the Syriac church), Romans, Greeks, and Arabs. |
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