00 Book List.rar
2.39 MB
01 Colloquial Yiddish The Complete Course for Beginners Audio.rar
162.64 MB
01 Colloquial Yiddish The Complete Course for Beginners.pdf
8.58 MB
02 College Yiddish Key to Exercises.pdf
1.47 MB
02 College Yiddish.djvu
7.94 MB
02 College Yiddish.pdf
117.94 MB
03 Audio Part 1.rar
83.71 MB
03 Audio Part 2.rar
107.70 MB
03 Audio Part 3.rar
111.01 MB
03 Audio Part 4.rar
124.93 MB
03 Yiddish An Introduction to the Language, Literature and Culture (Volume I).pdf
48.88 MB
04 Yiddish An Introduction to the Language, Literature and Culture (Volume II).pdf
139.28 MB
05 Key to Yiddish for Beginners.pdf
149.34 MB
06 Yiddish II A Textbook for Intermediate Courses.pdf
29.53 MB
07 Самоучитель Ñзыка идиш.djvu
21.65 MB
07 Самоучитель Ñзыка идиш.pdf
104.74 MB
08 Идиш Учебник Ð´Ð»Ñ Ñ€ÑƒÑÑкоговорÑщих.djvu
19.79 MB
09 В помощь изучающим идиш.djvu
28.06 MB
09 В помощь изучающим идиш.pdf
56.05 MB
10 Jidysz Podręcznik Nauki Języka dla Początkujących.pdf
557.86 KB
11 First Steps In Yiddish Reading And Grammar.djvu
1.18 MB
12 A Manual and Grammar of The Yiddish Language.pdf
4.82 MB
13 Grammar of The Yiddish Language.pdf
34.12 MB
14 Lessons in Conversational Yiddish.pdf
1.58 MB
15 Yiddish Phrase Dictionary and Study Guide (Language 30) Audio.rar
50.41 MB
15 Yiddish Phrase Dictionary and Study Guide (Language 30).pdf
5.44 MB
16 Yiddish Alphabet in Pictures.djvu
1.25 MB
17 My First Yiddish Word Book.pdf
11.97 MB
18 Hebrew and Aramaic Words in the Yiddish Language.pdf
118.05 MB
19 Modern English-Yiddish Yiddish-English Dictionary.pdf
92.85 MB
20 Kurzer Yiddish-Russischer Werterbuch 1.pdf
6.53 MB
20 Kurzer Yiddish-Russischer Werterbuch 2.pdf
7.35 MB
21 Idish-English Brivenshteler Yiddish-English Letter Writer.djvu
2.22 MB
22 The Story of Yiddish.pdf
1.41 MB
23 Adventures in Yiddishland.pdf
2.23 MB
24 80 Folks Lider.pdf
6.12 MB
25 ייִדיש ב×ָבע מעשיות Audio.rar
63.66 MB
25 ייִדיש ב×ָבע מעשיות.pdf
14.32 MB
26 Sholem Aleichem Short Stories Audio.rar
28.64 MB
26 Sholem Aleichem Short Stories.rar
357.37 KB
Yiddish has historically been the language of the Ashkenazim, the Jews of Central and Eastern Europe and their descendants around the world. At its peak, in the years immediately preceding the Holocaust, there were perhaps ten or eleven million Yiddish speakers worldwide, making Yiddish the most widely spoken Jewish language. As a combined result of genocide in Europe, cultural assimilation in America, and official and unofficial pressure to shift to Hebrew in Israel and Russian in the Soviet Union, today there are probably fewer than two million speakers, most of whom no longer use it as their primary language. With the rare exceptions of young Yiddish activists, it is only in certain Orthodox and Hasidic communities that Yiddish remains the language of everyday discourse and is still learned by children. However, there has been a resurgence of interest in Ashkenazic culture generally in recent decades, and Yiddish courses are now offered by many universities and Jewish cultural organizations.
The great Yiddish scholar Max Weinreich described it as a fusion language that combines elements from Germanic, Slavic, Semitic, and other languages. This is certainly true, but most linguists would agree that at its core Yiddish is a West Germanic language, and thus a close cousin of English, and an even closer relative of German.