Language Information by Source

Turoyo and Mlahso

Otto Jastrow. 2011. "Turoyo and Mlahso." In Semitic Languages: An International Handbook, edited by Stefan Weninger. 697-708. de Gruyter.

Speakers

Native or fluent speakers:
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Second-language speakers and learners
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Semi-speakers or rememberers
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Children:
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Young adults
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Older adults
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Elders
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Ethnic or community population
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Year information was gathered
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Comments on speakers
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Location and Context

Countries
Turkey, US, Canada, Australia, Central Europe, Scandinavia,
Location Description

"The original homeland of the Turoyo language is the so-called Tur-'Abdin, a compact area in the eastern part of Mardin province, in south-east Turkey. The Turoyo-speaking population who lived there were Christian and largely adhered to the Syrian Orthodox Church. The ethnocide of the Armenians in 1915 also brought death and destruction to Tur 'Abdin but did not lead to a wholesale extermination of the ethnic group. By 1970 an estimated 20,000 Turoyo speakers still lived in the area, but due to continuing pressure they gradually emigrated to Western Europe and other parts of the world. The Turoyo-speaking diaspora in Central Europe and Scandinavia is estimated at some 40,000 people, and there are also large communities in the United States, Canada and Australia while only a few hundred speakers remain in the original homeland."

Government Support
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Institutional Support
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Speakers' Attitude
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Other Languages Used By The Community
None
Number of Other Language Speakers:
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Domains of Other Languages:
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Writing Systems

Standard orthography:
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Writing system:
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Other writing systems used:
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Comments on writing systems:
Both Turoyo and Mlahso were unwritten vernaculars, with solely oral transmission. In recent years European diaspora communities have made attempts to write Turoyo, either in Syriac or in Latin characters.

Community Members