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Aramaic is the language the Jews spoke after the exile. The Peshitta is written in Aramaic as well as parts of Daniel and Ezra. Jewish Targums, much of Jewish rabbinic literature and a lot of Syrian Christian literature is in Aramaic. Also some of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
For the Peshitta you can use the Peshitta tool by dukhrana. They also have a number of lexicons you can download. I taught myself some of the scripts so I can find words in the lexicons but I can't read very well. I hope to be able to read it one day!
Arabic is a fascinating language I think. Aramaic is quite similar to Hebrew. Hebrew and Arabic share similarities as well. According to this it's about 60%. Like German and English. Aramaic and Hebrew compare to each other as sister languages for example as English to Dutch. Dutch is closer to English than German from the Germanic language tree. Hebrew, Arabic and Aramaic are from the Semitic language tree.
Basics of Biblical Aramaic Video Lectures provides 22 easy-to-follow lessons. It is an ideal resource for formal Aramaic language students wanting additional help in their learning; for instructors wanting to devote classroom time to drills and exercises, giving them a lecture tool their students can watch on their own time; and for armchair students of biblical Aramaic with an interest in learning on their own.
But after the release of the blockbuster film The Passion of the Christ, which is in Aramaic and Latin with English subtitles, John Evans decided to teach a weeknight class in the language. The first session was at Northeast Cape Fear Regional Library, and the rest of the classes will be held at the Church of the Good Shepherd, where Mr. Evans offers similar lessons for Sunday school classes.
"I heard him talking about it on WAAV radio last night, and it sounded like something I'd like to do, something different," she said. "I hope to learn a little bit of background on the language, too."
"I had been practicing meditation for a while, and I wanted to find a focused spirituality in Christianity," he said. He decided learning Aramaic was one way to do that. He went to Harvard Divinity School to learn Hebrew, the first step to speaking Aramaic. Mr. Evans has been studying the language bit by bit since then. He teaches the prayer in Aramaic line-by-line, the language's historic background and the differing meanings behind each word of the prayer.
In last week's class, Mr. Evans explained that words in Aramaic have many different meanings, depending on the context in which they are used. The first line of The Lord's Prayer has eight potential meanings, and all are accepted scholarly interpretations.
For example, "Abwoon d'bwashmaya "could mean: "O Brother! Father-Mother of the Cosmos, you create all that moves in light," or "Source of Sound: in the roar and the whisper, in the breeze and the whirlwind, we hear your Name."
So back in Jesus' day "there was a real possibility that you would have to ponder over everything the speaker was saying to fully understand because every word could have multiple meanings," he told the class.
To aid his knowledge of Aramaic, Mr. Evans is teaching from Prayers of the Cosmos: Meditations on the Aramaic Words of Jesus by Neil Douglas-Klotz, and he has CDs of a native Aramaic speaker saying the prayer so students can practice at home. (Students can attend the class without buying the book.)
The first night of the class, Mr. Evans' students also learned some historic contexts for the Aramaic language and where it survives today. He said about a half million people still speak Aramaic in small isolated villages in Syria, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Jordan.
"Paul's branch of the church spoke Greek or Latin and thrived in the Roman Empire under Constantine, but east of the Roman Empire, Christians and Jews there have always taught in Aramaic," he said. "Aramaic has dots and dashes around it today that are called vowel pointers because the language was originally written just for the consonants, and you had to already know where to put the vowel sounds." He added that Aramaic evolved into Arabic in Iran two centuries after the time of Muhammad.
Mr. Evans plans to do future Aramaic courses interpreting different Bible scriptures because, "there's more than a life's work here," he said. "I'm trying to make this strictly Christian and to offer a lot of fidelity to the Scripture the way it is."
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Aramaic is a historical language, which dates back to almost 1000 BC. It was used as an administrative language for a variety of empires and as a language of religious study for a little over 3,000 years. Today, there are few native speakers of the language left. However, Aramaic retains its importance as a language because of its rich historical background and lasting religious relevance. If you're interested in learning Aramaic, you might not be sure of where to begin. Or, if you already know some Aramaic, you may be interested in advancing your progress even further. One of the best ways to accomplish either of these tasks is to work with an Aramaic tutor. Varsity Tutors can help you learn Aramaic by connecting you with Aramaic tutoring that meets your needs.
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Il corso si rivolge a studenti gi iniziati alle lingue semitiche e si svolge in modo seminariale. Verte sulla conoscenza di scritture epigrafiche semitiche, in particolare fenicia, aramaica, ebraica, siriaca.
The course focuses on the knowledge of Semitic epigraphic writings, in particular Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac. Students are expected to possess a background knowledge on Semitic languages (e.g., they are expected to know at least two Semitic languages)
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