Ladino language

Judaeo-Spanish
Ladino
גֿודֿיאו-איספאנייול Djudeo-Espagnol
גֿידֿייו Djidio
גֿודֿזמו Djudesmo
איספאנייול Espagnol
איספאנייוליקו Espagnolico
חאקיטיאה Jaquetía
לאדינו Ladino
Pronunciation[dʒuˈðeo espaˈɲol]
Native to Israel
 Turkey
 USA
 France
 Greece
 Brazil
 UK
and others
EthnicitySephardim
Native speakers
Between 70,000 and 200,000.[1] Most recent estimates around 95,000.
72,000 in Israel,
7,000 in Turkey,
3,500 in the USA,
2,500 in France,
around 1,000 each in Greece, Brazil and the UK. (2013)
Dialects
  • Haketia Variant - Morocco, Canada
  • Levantine Variant - main variant, two branches
    Occidental branch - originally spoken in Albania, Romania, Western Bulgaria, Western Greece and Yugoslavia
    Oriental branch - originally spoken in Eastern Bulgaria, Eastern Greece, the Middle East, North Africa (except for Morocco) and Turkey.[1]
  • Ponentine Variant - extinct
Mainly Latin script
Original script Rashi and Solitreo
Other scripts; Persian, Cyrillic, Greek and Hebrew.
Official status
Regulated byAutoridad Nasionala del Ladino in Israel (using Latin letters)
Language codes
ISO 639-2lad
ISO 639-3lad
ELPLadino
Linguasphere51-AAB-ba ... 51-AAB-bd
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Ladino (also called Judeo-Spanish) is a Jewish Romance language that is very close to the Spanish language. It has many old Spanish words and Hebrew words.

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Judeo-Spanish Language - General Overview". Archived from the original on 20 September 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2013.

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