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Locating the potential development of spatial ability in the Swedish national curriculum. [PDF]
Lin TJ +3 more
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Exploring the digital extremist ecosystem: a preliminary analysis of hateful posts on Mod DB. [PDF]
Schlegel L +3 more
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Lessons Learned from the Launch and Implementation of the COVID-19 Contact Tracing Program in New York City: a Qualitative Study. [PDF]
Paul MM +9 more
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European Judaism, 2009
Using pre-war Poland as an example, Helen Beer describes the richness of Yiddish cultural life prior to the Holocaust. Upon briefly sketching aspects of the Yiddish-speaking world of our times, she illustrates the modern phenomenon of forging an allegiance to Yiddish without knowledge of the language.
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Using pre-war Poland as an example, Helen Beer describes the richness of Yiddish cultural life prior to the Holocaust. Upon briefly sketching aspects of the Yiddish-speaking world of our times, she illustrates the modern phenomenon of forging an allegiance to Yiddish without knowledge of the language.
openaire +1 more source
Cahiers de linguistique sociale, 1987
Cette présentation linguistique et sociolinguistique de la langue yiddish, tente d’établir une synthèse des différents travaux de recherches publiés dans ce domaine. Né vers le IXème siècle dans une région rhénane que les Juifs appellent alors Loter .
Weber, M. H, Szpic, H., Mury, Y.
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Cette présentation linguistique et sociolinguistique de la langue yiddish, tente d’établir une synthèse des différents travaux de recherches publiés dans ce domaine. Né vers le IXème siècle dans une région rhénane que les Juifs appellent alors Loter .
Weber, M. H, Szpic, H., Mury, Y.
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2023
The Yiddish language is directly linked to the culture and destiny of the Jewish population of Central and Eastern Europe. It originated as the everyday language of the Jewish population in the German-speaking lands around the Middle Ages and underwent a series of developments until the Shoah, which took a particularly large toll on the Yiddish ...
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The Yiddish language is directly linked to the culture and destiny of the Jewish population of Central and Eastern Europe. It originated as the everyday language of the Jewish population in the German-speaking lands around the Middle Ages and underwent a series of developments until the Shoah, which took a particularly large toll on the Yiddish ...
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This chapter begins by outlining the history and development of Yiddish, the traditional vernacular of Ashkenazic Jews, and it discusses how Yiddish went from being a vibrant language spoken by millions to being an endangered minority language with only a fraction of its original speaker population – primarily as a result of the Holocaust.
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