Template talk:Jewish language
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[edit] Indo-European
Given that neither Hebrew nor Aramaic is Indo-European, the present breakdown of categories seems a bit odd. -- Jmabel | Talk
- Yeah, I just didn't want a huge list of languages in one section. The section heading can come out, or if you think of other classifications that would be fine too. Jayjg (talk) 01:40, 24 Mar 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Yeshivish and/or Yinglish
Should Yeshivish and/or Yinglish be added to the template? If so, should they go under the Yiddish section? Jayjg (talk) 05:29, 28 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'd say prolly yeah...I also think it might be appropriate to split the growing bottom section up in some logical manner, and perhaps remove the parentheses, leaving the clarification of what each language is a Judæo- of to the articles themselves, or conversely, but probably less desirable, leaving the giving of the language's self-designation to the article, and putting in awkward-sounding names like Iranian Kurdistani Judæo-Aramaic and the like. Tomer TALK 01:23, Mar 30, 2005 (UTC)
- One possible recommendation for splitting up that bottom section: Indo-European (Ladino, Italkian, Yevanic, Knaanic, Djidi, Zarphatic, Juhuri); Afro-Asiatic (Judæo-Arabic, Judæo-Berber, Kayla, Kaïliña); Ural-Altaic (Krymchak (which should really have its own article, Krymchak_language, separate from the Krymchaks article, which should be moved to Krymchak), Karaim); Other (Judæo-Georgian, Judæo-Malayalam); Tomer TALK 01:28, Mar 30, 2005 (UTC)
- Given that each division makes the template longer, I would recommend no section have fewer than 3, and preferably 5 items in it. Thus Indo-European (Ladino, Italkian, Yevanic, Knaanic, Djidi, Zarphatic, Juhuri); Afro-Asiatic (Judæo-Arabic, Judæo-Berber, Kayla, Kaïliña); Other (Krymchak, Karaim); Other (Judæo-Georgian, Judæo-Malayalam). Of course, that leaves the question of what to do with Yiddish, Hebrew, and Aramaic; do they get their own sections, or go in Indo-European and Afro-Asiatic? I suggest the former, based on their importance and number of sub-topics, but people might object. Jayjg (talk) 17:15, 30 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm fine with "the former" as well. Thus far, you Jmabel and I are the only three who have made any input yet, I say we get Jmabel's vote and move forward. So far, we have a 2/3 majority tho... ;-) Tomer TALK 18:40, Mar 30, 2005 (UTC)
- Given that each division makes the template longer, I would recommend no section have fewer than 3, and preferably 5 items in it. Thus Indo-European (Ladino, Italkian, Yevanic, Knaanic, Djidi, Zarphatic, Juhuri); Afro-Asiatic (Judæo-Arabic, Judæo-Berber, Kayla, Kaïliña); Other (Krymchak, Karaim); Other (Judæo-Georgian, Judæo-Malayalam). Of course, that leaves the question of what to do with Yiddish, Hebrew, and Aramaic; do they get their own sections, or go in Indo-European and Afro-Asiatic? I suggest the former, based on their importance and number of sub-topics, but people might object. Jayjg (talk) 17:15, 30 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- One possible recommendation for splitting up that bottom section: Indo-European (Ladino, Italkian, Yevanic, Knaanic, Djidi, Zarphatic, Juhuri); Afro-Asiatic (Judæo-Arabic, Judæo-Berber, Kayla, Kaïliña); Ural-Altaic (Krymchak (which should really have its own article, Krymchak_language, separate from the Krymchaks article, which should be moved to Krymchak), Karaim); Other (Judæo-Georgian, Judæo-Malayalam); Tomer TALK 01:28, Mar 30, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Splitting off Indo-Iranian languages
The time may soon come to split off Jewish Indo-Iranian languages to a separate section, and possibly Jewish Romance languages as well...especially after I finish the articles I promised to have done in half an hour (and won't be done with...) Any objections? Tomer TALK 08:10, Apr 5, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Attention-stealing template
It looks like a lot of effort has been made to improve these articles on Jewish languages, but I don't know if this template really helps. In some articles it actually displaces the language infobox, and it is very big. Is there any way of making it more discrete or maybe solve it with ordinary link lists? Peter Isotalo 21:40, May 6, 2005 (UTC)
- The problem is not (IMHO) that it's displacing other templates, but that it is having an attention conflict with the language infoboxes in a couple (far from the majority) of the relevant articles...If you really feel that it's that big a problem, I think the solution would be to get rid of the language infoboxes instead of the template, as the language infoboxes are quite easily accessible from the "parent language"s of each individual Jewish language. Tomer TALK 21:45, May 6, 2005 (UTC)
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- The language infobox is present in at least a hundred language articles. To remove it just to make room for an exclusively Jewish infobox is less than ideal. Like all other language articles, the Jewish languages are still first and foremost linguistic, and should be shown in a continuum of related languages by having the infobox, not that they happen to be spoken by Jews.
- Peter Isotalo 08:14, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
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- But my beef wasn't mainly about this template taking precedence over the infobox, but rather about its ungainly appearance. Is there really no way of making it a bit more descrete, like making it horizontal and placing it at the bottom, like with most other similar templates, and perhaps cutting down on the amount of links?
- Peter Isotalo 17:27, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
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I'm cool with making it horizontal and putting it at the bottom. I was the one who made an effort to put all the mentioned Jewish languages in one box, so I'll take responsibility for the clutter and am agreeable to the proposed solution. I'll give it a couple of days and then I'll do it, though I'm hardly an expert on template design. --Leifern 17:42, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
I dunno, Peter...I'll solicit comment from people who have shown an interest in such templates in the past, except Leifern, who seems to be monitoring this closely already. :-p Tomer TALK 17:46, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
- I think one reason the template clashes a bit with the language info box is due to the different sizes and colors of the two templates. The language info box is wide and bright green, and this template is long and has an almost purple blue in some of the background. One suggestion I would make is to use a more subtle blue background like this, using color #d6e7ff instead of #ccccff. Also, On the info box for Yiddish language for example, I think the family color should be changed to "lightgreen" instead of that bright "lawngreen"; compare with Abaza language. If the colors of these two templates/info boxes are made, it would make them less attention-stealing and gaudy together. --MPerel ( talk | contrib) 18:51, 15 May 2005 (UTC)
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- You also might want to consider the approach we took at Template:French Revolution, which takes all of the content of Template:History of France, but supplements it with topics specific to the Revolution. -- Jmabel | Talk 19:06, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
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- I'd recommend checking out this first, MPerel. The different colors are used because the languages belong to different language families. And this is really isn't a matter of color... It's because this template has been applied to a group of articles (languages) that it wasn't really intendend for. The size of the template is also a reason for it being ill-suited for the current design. I can recommend redesigning it based on Template:Chinese language as well as the placement of the Chinese template (at the bottom, not right smack at the top, where it's bound to come in conflict with text, section layout and pictures).
- Peter Isotalo 19:15, May 15, 2005 (UTC)
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- Thanks, Tomer, for bringing this to my attention. I think that if a group of articles has a predetermined infobox that goes in a specific place, a template should not usurp that infobox's attention. In the case of this template, which will be on more than one article on languages and will only be on articles on languages, it would be prudent to turn this into a {BOTTOM} template. E=MC^2 T@lk 17:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Hebrew naming conventions
Urgent: see Wikipedia:Naming conventions (Hebrew) to add your opinions about this important matter. Thank you. IZAK 18:19, 11 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] redesign
Per the above discussion, I've redesigned the template. Until we have consensus to replace the old one with this one, please make changes at {{Jewish language/redesign}}. This is what it looks like:
Jewish languages | ||
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Hebrew (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern (vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi | ||
Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Bijil Neo-Aramaic | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | ||
Other Afro-Asiatic: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | ||
Yiddish: Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | ||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | ||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | ||
Other Indo-European: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | ||
Altaic: Krymchak | Karaim | ||
Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam | ||
Kartvelian: Gruzinic |
Tomertalk 17:19, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
- OK, I tightened up the bottom of it a bit so it now looks like this:
Jewish languages | ||
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Hebrew (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern (vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi | ||
Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Bijil Neo-Aramaic | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | ||
Other Afro-Asiatic: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | ||
Yiddish: Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | ||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | ||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | ||
Other Indo-European: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | ||
Altaic: Krymchak | Karaim Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam Kartvelian: Gruzinic |
I think that we need to come up with a design that minimized whitespace as much as possible. The former had that advantage, but I see the advantages of having a horizontal version at the bottom.
A larger issue, I think is the extent to which this template a) gives an overview of the field of Jewish language by way of an implied taxonomy; and b) provides a navigational device for those who want to immerse themselves in the topic. For example, the article on Yinglish is interesting, but is a very different phenomenon from Yevanic, to take a random example. So I guess my question is, what is the right way to structure this knowledge? --Leifern 18:09, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
- If you put Hebrew (vocalizations) under Hebrew (eras) it would help remove a lot of whitespace. Jayjg (talk) 18:50, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
- Thank you for your suggestion! When you feel an article needs improvement, please feel free to make whatever changes you feel are needed. Wikipedia is a wiki, so anyone can edit any article by simply following the Edit this page link at the top. You don't even need to log in! (Although there are some reasons why you might like to...) The Wikipedia community encourages you to be bold. Don't worry too much about making honest mistakes—they're likely to be found and corrected quickly. If you're not sure how editing works, check out how to edit a page, or use the sandbox to try out your editing skills. New contributors are always welcome.
- Tomertalk 19:35, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
- OK, I put "vocalizations" down a line (although I'm still not at all happy with that description), and took out some spaces in the bottom line. It now looks like this:
Jewish languages | ||
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Hebrew (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern (vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi |
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Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Bijil Neo-Aramaic | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | ||
Other Afro-Asiatic: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | ||
Yiddish: Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | ||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | ||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | Judeo-Golpaygani | Judeo-Shirazi | ||
Other Indo-European: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | ||
Altaic: Krymchak | Karaim Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam Kartvelian: Gruzinic |
For some reason, Bijil Neo-Aramaic is now a redirect to Barzani Jewish Neo-Aramaic, so I've changed that in the template, which makes the Aramaic line a bit shorter, thus:
Jewish languages | ||
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Hebrew (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern (vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi |
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Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Barzani | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | ||
Other Afro-Asiatic: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | ||
Yiddish: Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | ||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | ||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | Judeo-Golpaygani | Judeo-Shirazi | ||
Other Indo-European: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | ||
Altaic: Krymchak | Karaim Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam Kartvelian: Gruzinic |
Tomertalk 19:50, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
- OK, now with some edits by Joe and another by me, this is what it looks like:
Jewish languages ( ) | |||
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Hebrew | (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern | ||
(vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi | |||
Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Barzani | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | |||
Other Afro-Asiatic: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | |||
Yiddish: Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | YIVO | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | |||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | |||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | Judeo-Golpaygani | Judeo-Shirazi | |||
Other Indo-European: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | |||
Altaic: Krymchak | Karaim Dravidian: Judeo-Malayalam Kartvelian: Gruzinic |
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- OK, another minor edit...this time I added Category:Jewish languages to the template...so whoever does the changing out, when you take the template from the top to the bottom of the article, remove Category:Jewish languages. Tomertalk 20:09, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
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- A great improvement over the current template, guys, but it needs to a bit easier to separate categories of links within the box. Template:Chinese language to me seems like a pretty good act to follow. How much wider is it possible to make the template without having it screw up smaller screen resolutions?
- Peter Isotalo 10:59, 31 January 2006 (UTC)
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Jewish languages ( ) | |||
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Afro-Asiatic | |||
Hebrew | (eras): Biblical | Mishnaic | Medieval | Modern | ||
(vocalizations): Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Sanaani | Tiberian | Mizrahi | |||
Aramaic (Judeo-Aramaic): Barzani | Hulaulá | Lishana Deni | Lishan Didan | Lishanid Noshan | |||
Other: Judeo-Arabic | Kayla | Judeo-Berber | Qwara | |||
Indo-European | |||
Yiddish (Judæo-German): Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr. | YIVO | Yiddish Theater | Yeshivish | Yinglish | |||
Judæo-Romance: Catalanic | Italkit | Ladino | Judeo-Latin | Shuadit | Zarphatic | Judeo-Portuguese | |||
Judeo-Persian: Bukhori | Juhuri | Dzhidi | Judeo-Hamedani | Judeo-Golpaygani | Judeo-Shirazi | |||
Other: Yevanic (Judæo-Greek) | Knaanic (Judæo-Slavic) | Judeo-Marathi (Indic) | |||
Altaic | Dravidian | Kartvelian | |
Krymchak | Karaim | Judeo-Malayalam | Gruzinic |
OK...more modifications...first I reduced the family names, and that ended up looking like this...then I added in the "missing" articles, and got this rather putrid result. Any comments?
Tomertalk 06:22, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
- You're really getting somewhere, TShilo. But why "vocalizations"? "Dialects" seems far more natural. I would also really prefer "Judeo" over the decidedly inkhorn-ish "Judæo". Also, is it possible to make slightly wider?
- Peter Isotalo 07:48, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
- The "vocalizations" thing is not my doing, and as I've said before, I really dislike it. Because of a decided lack of defining vocabulary differences, however, someone decided that "dialect" was an inappropriate description. Given stress and intonation differences especially between Ashkenazic and other "vocalizations", I think the "vocalizations" and "dialects" arguments have about equal weight. As for Judeo- vs. Judæo-, I prefer "inkhornish" over "lazinessish" and "uneducatedish". Width is presently being determined here by the length of the text on each line. The reason it's as "narrow" as it is now, however, is to reduce "whitespace". Understanding your preference for "wider" might be helpful in understanding your insistence upon it, so if you could develop why you want it wider, that'd be nice. :-p That said, my big issue right now actually has more to do with the choppy left margin... Tomertalk 19:00, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
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- If it only refers to written variants, "vocalization" is appropriate (for Hebrew), but if we're talking one or more spoken variants, then it needs to be changed.
- Peter Isotalo 20:25, 4 February 2006 (UTC)
- It refers, actually, only to spoken variants. Ashkenazim, for example, say [ˡta ˑ lɪs] or [ˡta ˑ lɛs] for tallit, while sfaradhim say [ta ˑ ˡlet] or [ta ˑ ˡleθ]. Not only are the stressed syllables different, but so are the consonantal realizations. That said, Sfaraði "vocalizations" vary from community to community, influenced primarly by the phonology of the predominant regional language, Judezmo or otherwise, the "Sephardi vocalization" being a convenient "lumping together" of disparate communities' pronunciations, based on the erroneous assumption that Sfaraði communities had the same kind of cohesive communal history as Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi communities did... Such a mess... Tomertalk 09:52, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Is it time?
If y'all are sufficiently happy with the template that it's good enough to appear in articles, say so and I'll be happy to do the grunt work. (In other words, I think any remaining issues with the new template are minor enough that they can be hashed out without adversely [or significantly] affecting the usability or appearance of the template as it shows up in the affected articles.) Cheers, Tomertalk 16:05, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Isn't the template supposed to list languages?
What are the "Nat'l Yiddish Book Ctr.", "YIVO", and "Yiddish Theater" doing in a list of languages? --futhark 16:51, 19 February 2006 (UTC)
- Where does it say that the template is restricted to listing languages? Tomertalk 10:06, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
- The template is headed "Jewish Languages". Each of the subheadings is the name of a language family. Every entry in the table is the name of a language, with the exception of the three entries about Yiddish that I am questioning. If I have incorrectly inferred the purpose of the table, would someone please explain it to me? --futhark 15:58, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
- The "list" idea you refer to is part of the Jewish languages article. Additionally, there is a Category:Jewish languages. While the heading says "Jewish Languages", the topic is not a list. The template brings together all aspects of Jewish languages--the fact that there's plenty of room to grow for other languages besides Yiddish is no reason to hobble the Yiddish section of the template. I foresee a future for the template in which several new sections are developed that go way beyond the current scope, which is primarily organized on the basis of genetic relationship between the languages. Right now, based on the number of articles there are out there, this is the organizational structure that makes the most sense. This structure, however, is only one of several possibilities that suggest themselves (age, number of speakers, [secular] literary importance, use by the sages, etc.)... The current layout is a reflection of the table's original layout, which was itself a reflection of the then-burgeoning section on Jewish languages in {{Jew}}. There are additional articles on Hebrew phonology, alphabet, grammar, study, literature, and all the articles in {{Hebrew alphabet}}, for example, and Yiddish orthography and phonology and Yiddish morphology, as well as the lists Yiddish words and phrases used by English speakers and List of English words of Yiddish origin. With time and effort, these can all be incorporated into the template. Anyways, my primary interest for right now was to implement the "bottom" vs. "side" template style that was agreed upon by basically everyone but me several months ago. I'm not strongly attached to keeping the other links there (w/ the definite exception of YIVO), but I'd rather see the template developed than stripped down. The links for Yiddish theatre, National Yiddish Book Center, Yiddish typography and such could probably be handled together by including instead a link to Category:Yiddish. Tomertalk 22:20, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
- I also think that the first three Yiddish entries look out of place. Also, if this list were "further developed," it would really become a monster. I think it nicely does the job of connecting the Jewish languages. Perhaps it would be appropriate to have some sort of "Yiddish Language/Culture" table to connect that category of articles. --Eliyak 00:50, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- The "list" idea you refer to is part of the Jewish languages article. Additionally, there is a Category:Jewish languages. While the heading says "Jewish Languages", the topic is not a list. The template brings together all aspects of Jewish languages--the fact that there's plenty of room to grow for other languages besides Yiddish is no reason to hobble the Yiddish section of the template. I foresee a future for the template in which several new sections are developed that go way beyond the current scope, which is primarily organized on the basis of genetic relationship between the languages. Right now, based on the number of articles there are out there, this is the organizational structure that makes the most sense. This structure, however, is only one of several possibilities that suggest themselves (age, number of speakers, [secular] literary importance, use by the sages, etc.)... The current layout is a reflection of the table's original layout, which was itself a reflection of the then-burgeoning section on Jewish languages in {{Jew}}. There are additional articles on Hebrew phonology, alphabet, grammar, study, literature, and all the articles in {{Hebrew alphabet}}, for example, and Yiddish orthography and phonology and Yiddish morphology, as well as the lists Yiddish words and phrases used by English speakers and List of English words of Yiddish origin. With time and effort, these can all be incorporated into the template. Anyways, my primary interest for right now was to implement the "bottom" vs. "side" template style that was agreed upon by basically everyone but me several months ago. I'm not strongly attached to keeping the other links there (w/ the definite exception of YIVO), but I'd rather see the template developed than stripped down. The links for Yiddish theatre, National Yiddish Book Center, Yiddish typography and such could probably be handled together by including instead a link to Category:Yiddish. Tomertalk 22:20, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
- The template is headed "Jewish Languages". Each of the subheadings is the name of a language family. Every entry in the table is the name of a language, with the exception of the three entries about Yiddish that I am questioning. If I have incorrectly inferred the purpose of the table, would someone please explain it to me? --futhark 15:58, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Italkit vs. "Judeo-Italian varieties"
I reverted an anon's alteration of [[Italkian language|Italkit]] to [[Italkian language|Judeo-Italian varieties]] for 2 reasons:
- Italkit covers all the varieties so this doesn't need to be specified in the template and,
- Putting it in there that way unnecessarily widens the template for no redeemable reason I can see.
Tomertalk 10:18, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Dialects versus vocalizations
TShilo reverted my change of "dialects" to "vocalizations" with the claim that there are even differences in vocabulary.
This is simply not so. The historical differences between Ashkenazi, Sepharadi, Yemenite, etc. are for a language that was used for liturgy and Torah study, not a spoken language in day-to-day life. The texts were written similarly in all locations and could be sent, say, from Syria to France and read, but they would be read with different pronunciations in each place. All groups shared a common written corpus but pronounced it differently.
The way "dialect" is normally understood is not appropriate to the historical reality being described in this chart. Dovi 08:26, 26 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Ethiopian Semitic languages
Should Amharic and Tigrinya be included here since they were (and still are) spoken by the Beta Israel and related Jewish groups in Ethiopia? What about Ge'ez as a liturgical language? ዮም (Yom) | contribs • Talk 18:38, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
- If I understand correctly, those languages are not specifically Jewishly developed languages, but languages which happen to be spoken by Jews, and to include those would probably result in a list of nearly all existing and dead languages. --Eliyak 01:07, 5 June 2006 (UTC)