Judeo-Egyptian Arabic Explained

Judeo-Egyptian Arabic
States:Egypt
Familycolor:Afro-Asiatic
Fam2:Semitic
Fam3:Central Semitic
Fam4:Arabic
Fam5:Egyptian Arabic
Script:Arabic alphabet
Hebrew alphabet
Iso3:none
Glotto:none
Elp:10837
Elpname:Judeo-Egyptian Arabic
Ethnicity:Egyptian Jews

Judeo-Egyptian Arabic (also Egyptian Judeo-Arabic) is an Arabic dialect spoken by Egyptian Jews. It is a variety of Egyptian Arabic.

Classification

Judeo-Egyptian Arabic is one of the Judeo-Arabic dialects. It is close to the dialect of Alexandria, even for speakers in Cairo. For example, in Cairene Arabic, "I write" is baktib (بكتب) and "I eat" is bakol. In Egyptian Judeo-Arabic, as in western Alexandrian Arabic it is Arabic: nektobou (نكتبوا) and Arabic: neshrabou, resembling a first person but in plural form.[1]

History

Until the mid 20th century, there were around 75,000 speakers of Judeo-Egyptian Arabic. Today, most Egyptian Jews live in Israel and speak Hebrew.[2]

The first research on Judeo-Egyptian Arabic was done in 1968 by Nada Tomiche.[3]

Current status

Judeo-Egyptian Arabic is currently in decline due to the exodus of the Jews from Egypt, with almost none remaining today. The language may soon become extinct.[4]

Vocabulary

Most of the unique words in Judeo-Egyptian Arabic come from Hebrew, though some come from French and Italian. It also contains several words made by mixing Hebrew and Egyptian Arabic, as well as several extra pronouns not found in Egyptian Arabic.

Like other Judeo-Arabic dialects, Judeo-Egyptian Arabic preserves several archaic traits lost in Egyptian Arabic.[5]

Sample Text

!Judeo-Egyptian Arabic!English
ואל צביה חוסנת אל מנטר קווי ברכיה וראגל אלם ערפהא ונזלת אל עין ומלת גרתהא וטלעתand the girl (was) very good looking, a virgin, and no man had known her. She went down to the spring, filled her jar, and came up

Notes and References

  1. [Joshua Blau|Blau, Joshua]
  2. Web site: Judeo-Egyptian Arabic . 2024-02-02 . Endangered Languages . en.
  3. Hary . Benjamin . 2017-01-01 . B. Hary. “Spoken Late Egyptian Judeo-Arabic as Reflected in Written Forms.” . Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam . 12 . Academia.edu.
  4. M. Rosenbaum . Gabriel . The Arabic Dialect of Jews in Modern Egypt . Israeli Academic Center in Cairo . 35-39 . Historical Society of Jews From Egypt.
  5. Hary . Benjamin . 2017-01-01 . B. Hary. “Spoken Late Egyptian Judeo-Arabic as Reflected in Written Forms.” . Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam . 24 . Academia.edu.