Judeo-Tat
[también conocido como Hebrew Tat, Jewish Tat, Juhuri]Clasificación: Indo-European
·susceptible de extinción
Clasificación: Indo-European
·susceptible de extinción
Hebrew Tat, Jewish Tat, Juhuri, çuhuri, жугьури, ז'אוּהאוּראִ , ג'והורי, горско-еврейский, джуури, джухури, Dağ yəhudiləri dili, cuuri, cuhuri, Judeo-Tatic, Dzhuhuric, Juwri, |
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Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Western Iranian |
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ISO 639-3 |
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jdt |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “Europe and North Asia” (211-282) . Tapani Salminen (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
Azerbaijani
La información está incompleta “Glottolog” .
La información está incompleta “Juhuri: From the Caucasus to New York City” (59–74) . Habib Borjian; Daniel Kaufman (2016) De Gruyter Mouton
Young children in the New York communities do not speak the language (p. 67). "Juhuri children in school often identify themselves as Russian Jews or Azerbaijanis" (p. 65).
Speakers in the New York City community demonstrate multilingualism with Juhuri, Russian, English, Azerbaijani, and Hebrew, with Juhuri and Russian the dominant languages (p. 66).
Most of the speakers have immigrated to Israel and the United States.