Re: [Cz-L] Die Peschl

From: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>
Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2010 05:01:03 +0200
To: Paul Heger <pheger_at_gmail.com>, Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>
Reply-to: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>

Hebrew origin.
   Hebrew ,the sacred language , was forbidden for everyday use.
    Most of worshippers did not even understand the prayers .
      Just like latin for Catholics.
   Through the Yiddish, the Jews contravened this restriction.
      Now in Israel , the Hebrew ,taking big strides ,advances
     and develops with speed.
       So speedy that sometimes I feel that I am left behind.
     What the young generation does to the language !
        And the computer language !
          And the dual computer keyboard in English -Hebrew
    with two - directional typing where you wonder where the
    next type will appear , left or right of the existing text..
       But it is ours and we love it !
Hardy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Heger" <pheger_at_gmail.com>
To: "Miriam Taylor" <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>
Cc: "HARDY BREIER" <HARDY3_at_bezeqint.net>; "RUTH GOLD"
<glasgold_at_bellsouth.net>; <Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 2:28 AM
Subject: Re: [Cz-L] Die Peschl

Hello to all Yiddish lovers,

Mimi is right; Yiddish absorbed many words and expressions from the
languages spoken in the countries and areas in which they lived.
Czernowitz has possibly absorbed more than in other places, because a
great variety of peoples lived there, and many languages were spoken.

However, she forgot to mention Hebrew, which had a great input of
words, expressions and religious concepts on Yiddish everywhere. Just
to mention a few: Kosher, Treife, Yontyv, a Shabesgoy, a Ruv, a
Shoichet, a Hazen, Awade (sure) a Yozmach, a Batlen, a Kabzen, a
Hazer, and metaphors, like: er kikt wie a Huhn in Bnei Udem, er hot
verkehrt die Yozros and many, others. What seems strange, is the fact
that we use expressions like Dawenen and Pareve from foreign sources,
for religious concepts.

I have not gone through the entire Peschl list, but as it seems to me,
they are all Yiddish, not German, unless one considers Yiddish a
corrupt German, as some German asked a Yiddish speaker: If you have
learned German, why such a bad German? (it happened really. However,
I do not know if its author presented it as Czernowitzer German..

 I did not like his orthography; he uses indiscriminately the
character ”a” at the beginning on many words, where it should rather
be a “u” like in German, for example ubkalechn, ubmitsche, ubrechten,
unbroigesn, unkehren, etc. The German “a” is correct at ahi, abi,
akeigen, anu and similar.

Enjoy your Yiddish! It is a wonderful language.
Paul/Pessach Heger

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Received on 2010-09-14 00:13:19

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