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| | The Ladino Language |
 | | Ladino spread throughout the Mediterranean after Spain expelled it's Jews in 1492, and is currently spoken by about 160,000 Jews in Turkey, the Balkans, North Africa, Israel and the Americas. |  | | Sometimes called "Spaniolish," Ladino is the Spanish-Jewish dialect spoken by Sephardic Jews. |  | | But because of the recent trend among Sephardic Jews to adapt local languages in place of traditional ones, Ladino is now in decline. |
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http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/Ladino.html
(165 words)
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| | j. - Habla Ladino? Sephardim meet to preserve language |
 | | And it was a good thing, for they would have been deported to the death camps along with the Italian-born Jews who remained after the 1938 ouster. |  | | Their meeting can be credited to another woman in their midst, Dorice Haynes, who had been pondering the idea since her Egyptian Jewish mother died. |  | | "We must be grateful for the expulsion," Sagues told the Ladino group. |
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http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/7777/format/html/displaystory.html
(915 words)
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| | Ladino Explosion |
 | | Frank notes that the earliest Jewish settlers on this continent were Ladinos. |  | | Klezmer is the music of the Jews who spoke a form of German, those who arrived here from Eastern Europe. |  | | The folk dancer or world traveler might think Israeli, the ultra hip might think of Ben Laden and his Inter-Galactic Jewish Music Festivals. |
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http://www.citypaper.net/articles/053101/mus.ladino.shtml
(502 words)
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| | MyJewishLearning.com - Culture: Ladino Literature |
 | | Ladino's fantastical stories--sometimes called fables or folktales--often have Jewish themes, with biblical figures and legendary characters. |  | | After the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, the Ladino language--a rich blend of Hebrew and Spanish--moved to new countries, like Greece and Turkey, where Jewish refugees found new homes. |  | | Scholar Ilan Stavans, writing in The Forward newspaper, observes that because the Jews of the Iberian Peninsula were expelled, fiction took a backseat to other kinds of writing. |
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http://www.myjewishlearning.com/culture/literature/Primer_Jewish_Literature/EuropeanMiddleEastJewLit/LadinoLiterature.htm
(931 words)
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| | Ladino, the Sephardic Language - Judeo-Spanish Judeo-Espagnol |
 | | Ladino did not become a specifically Jewish language until after the expulsion from Spain in 1492 - it was merely the language of their province. |  | | Ladino speakers who survived the Holocaust and emigrated to Latin America tended to pick up regular Spanish very quickly, whilst others adopted the language of whichever country they ended up in. |  | | When the Jews were expelled from Spain and Portugal they were cut off from the further development of the language, but they continued to speak it in the communities and countries to which they emigrated. |
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http://www.sephardicstudies.org/quickladino.html
(651 words)
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| | Ladino language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The name 'Dzhudezmo' is used by Jewish linguists, 'Judeo-Espanyol' by Turkish Jews; 'Judeo-Spanish' by Romance philologists; 'Ladino' by laymen, especially in Israel; 'Hakitia' by Moroccan Jews; 'Spanyol' by some others. |  | | Despite a major fire, economic oppression by Greek authorities, and mass settlement of Greek-speaking refugees, the language remained widely spoken in Salonika until the death of 49,000 Salonikan Jews in the Holocaust during the Second World War. |  | | The dialect of the Oran area of Algeria was called Tetuani or Tetauni, after the Moroccan town Tétouan, since many Oranais Jews came from this city. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judaeo-Spanish
(924 words)
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| | Ladino Transformation |
 | | Most who remained were proud communists, ready to set aside Ladino in favor of the secular national language. |  | | In 2003 I traveled to Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, to research a chapter for a book called The Lemon Tree, about an Arab and a Jew and their common history in the city of Ramle, in present-day Israel. |  | | After the war, nine out of every ten Bulgarian Jews moved to the new state of Israel, where Hebrew would take hold. |
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http://www.homelands.org/worlds/ladino.html
(540 words)
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| | Wandering Thoughts on the Sephardim and Their Language, Ladino |
 | | For the most part they were a mysterious people to me, and even after I met some of them in the middle years of my life, they remained a people apart, Jews who were not REAL JEWS, because they spoke Ladino (another mystery) instead of Yiddish. |  | | In his 'Presentación' the author tells us that when he was around fifteen years old he came across a fascicule of some one hundred pages entitled 'Judíos españoles' (Spanish Jews). |  | | Two days later Spain extended the offer to all Jews refused asylum by Germany and the Balkan States. |
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http://www.dartmouth.edu/~library/Library_Bulletin/Apr1990/LB-A90-Levenson.html
(3224 words)
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| | Links and Bibliography for Judeo-Spanish/Djudeo-Espanyol/Ladino |
 | | I would like to maintain on this page a bibliography of resources for the study of Judeo-Spanish (sometimes called Ladino, though this term refers more properly to a Hebrew-Spanish calque), the language spoken by the Sephardic jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492. |  | | I started this internet-based bibliography because I believe that anyone studying the history of the Spanish language should know something about Judeo-Spanish, and because I found it rather difficult to find information about it when I began to study it. |  | | An article from Jewish World Review about the presevation of Ladino |
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http://www.geocities.com/katacha/sefardi.html
(407 words)
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| | languagehat.com: KEEPING LADINO ALIVE. |
 | | The Israeli government joined the efforts seven years ago, establishing the National Ladino Authority, which has prompted a surge of interest in the language and culture. |  | | Sorry if he has been mentionned already, but, in France, linguist Haïm Vidal Sephiha (also a survivor of the genocide and incidentally the father of Le Monde diplomatique jounalist Dominique Vidal, has put a lot of passion into the promotion of ladino. |  | | Israel is believed to have the largest number of people — perhaps as many as 200,000 — who can speak or understand the language. |
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http://www.languagehat.com/archives/001398.php
(1307 words)
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| | The Jewish Journal Of Greater Los Angeles |
 | | In recent years, there has been a boom of interest in the language among young people, especially within Israel. |  | | The Internet may prove a valuable tool for preserving a language spoken by Jews for 500 years. |  | | Ladino, which is also known as Judeo-Spanish, dates back to the Spanish Expulsion of 1492, when it became a specifically Jewish language. |
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http://www.jewishjournal.com/archive/09.15.00/art2.09.15.00.html
(279 words)
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| | NPR : Ladino, the Language of Sephardic Jews |
 | | NPR : Ladino, the Language of Sephardic Jews |  | | Morning Edition, December 19, 2003 · NPR's Renee Montagne talks to two experts about the past and future of Ladino, the 500-year-old language of Sephardic Jews. |  | | Rabbi Mark Angel is a Ladino scholar who leads the congregation at Manhattan's Spanish-Portuguese Synagogue. |
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http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1554187
(145 words)
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| | A center for Ladino studies. |
 | | The establishment of the Naime and Yehoshua Salti Center for Ladino Studies will be a major contribution toward ensuring this precious Jewish legacy for Sephardim and all Jews today and for the Jewish future. |  | | Head of the Center: Dr. Shmuel Refael, Head of the Department of Literature of the Jewish People |  | | The Faculty of Jewish Studies at Bar-Ilan University is at the forefront of Jewish studies education and research in Israel and throughout the world. |
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http://www.sefarad.org/publication/lm/053/html/page44.html
(501 words)
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| | Concise Encyclopedic Dictionary (Judeo-Spanish) |
 | | The Bibliography of this Dictionary does not list any of the Ladino books published in Israel in the last 20 years, such as those by Matilda Koen-Sarrano, or the very popular semiannual review Aki Yerushalayim, all of which use a de- facto standardized orthography. |  | | The authors also seem unaware of the existence in Israel of the government -funded «Autoritad Nasyonal de Ladino i Su Kultura», an organization for the promotion of Ladino and its culture, which just last October held an international conference on establishing a uniform spelling system for Ladino. |  | | Compiling a Ladino dictionary is, above all, a labor of love, and we must give the Kohens their due credit for their labor. |
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http://www.sefarad.org/publication/lm/039/5.html
(788 words)
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| | Jewish Language Research Website: Judeo-Spanish / Judezmo / Ladino |
 | | Other names are used as well, but Judezmo (meaning Judaism, too), Ladino, or Judeo-Espanyol (Judeo-Spanish) are the most common. |  | | The Kharjas and Taqanot Valladolid show the interaction among languages used by the Jews. |  | | A number of poets, such as Margalit Matityahu, Matilda Koen-Sarano, and Avner Perez in Israel, Rita Gabbai Simantov in Greece, Clarisse Nikoidski in France, and Gloria Ascher in the United States, write or wrote Judeo-Spanish poetry. |
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http://www.jewish-languages.org/judeo-spanish.html
(2371 words)
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| | The Ladino Language |
 | | When I heard about the Crypto Jews of New Mexico, I wondered if they had preserved any elements of the Ladino dialect. |  | | In my communications with Crypto Jews I found many who's grandparents said El Dio rather than Dios but none who called Sunday Alhat. |  | | Years later I found that the first three words were Portuguese and the fourth was Catalan. |
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http://home.earthlink.net/~benven/ladino.html
(620 words)
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| | Ladino Love Songs |
 | | For the next five hundred years they kept identifying themselves as "Sephardic Jews" ("Sepharad" is the Hebrew word for "Spain") and regardless of the languages spoken in their new countries of exile, they kept speaking Spanish. |  | | At fifteen minutes to eight my grandmother, who came to Israel from Turkey, would turn on the radio. |  | | It was the daily broadcast for new immigrants, the segment for Ladino speakers. |
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http://www.newalbion.com/NA105
(347 words)
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| | Ladino: Medieval Language of the Jews of Spain |
 | | Ladino: Medieval Language of the Jews of Spain |  | | For many centuries Sephardic Jews were the dominant influence in Jewish history and culture, but today Ladino is considered a "seriously endangered" language. |  | | Still spoken today by approximately 160,000 people, Ladino is the traditional language of Sephardic Jews. |
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http://va003.urj.net/ladino.html
(145 words)
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| | Ladino --- A Lost Language? |
 | | When the Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492, they took their language with them. |  | | Editions in Ladino, though, are all out of print --- but can be found, of course, in Peretz' Institute. |  | | The Institute for Ladino has a computer progam with explanations in Hebrew; soon the material will be published in book format. |
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http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0798/ladino1.asp
(802 words)
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| | Ladino |
 | | In 1492, the years best known to history as the year in which the Jews were expelled from Spain, Ladino was distributed by the refugees all over the Mediterranean world. |  | | Today, Ladino is spoken by fewer than 80,000 people living in Israel. |  | | Latin, the language of the Romans was so called because southern Italy was called Latium by the Etruscans before the founding of Rome in 509 B.C.E. The Jews, speaking medieval Spanish mixed with some Hebrew used that language in all the Balkans and Turkey where they settled after 1492. |
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http://www.jbuff.com/C071300.htm
(304 words)
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| | Ladino (djudeoespanyol) language |
 | | It is spoken by the descendants of the Sefardim or Sephardim, Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492. |  | | There are currently about 700,000 speakers of Ladino in Israel, the USA and Argentina, although only about 200,000 of them use the language regularly. |  | | Ladino is also written with the Latin alphabet. |
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http://www.omniglot.com/writing/ladino.htm
(163 words)
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| | Indian vs Ladino worldview |
 | | Ladino Every individual has the right to attempt to control the universe, including other men. |  | | Ladino Valued as source of income but personal labor on land is irksome and disgraceful. |  | | Women do not share with men in public affairs. |
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http://www.utexas.edu/courses/stross/ant322m_files/worldview.htm
(547 words)
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| | Ladino language -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust! |
 | | It originated in Spain and was carried to its present speech areas by descendants of the Jews who were exiled from Spain after 1492. |  | | A very archaic form of Castilian Spanish, mixed somewhat with Hebrew elements, Ladino originated in Spain and was carried to its present speech areas by the descendants of the Spanish Jews who were exiled from Spain... |  | | Romance language spoken by Sephardic Jews in the Balkans, the Middle East, North Africa, Greece, and Turkey, though nearly extinct in many of these areas. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9369595?tocId=9369595&query=null&ct=null
(837 words)
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| | Fortuna Web Page Biography, Discography, Reviews, Sound, Online Ordering |
 | | In the new countries the Jews continued to speak Ladino - also called Judezmo or Djudeo-Espanyol - a language which differed from the Spanish or Castillan spoken by the Christians at that time in that it includes Hebrew elements and some vocabulary from the local languages. |  | | She thus became proficient in Ladino, a language that was taken by the Spanish Jews to several parts of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, after they were ousted from Spain, in 1492. |  | | This rich and varied culture is the basis of the Ladino repertoire, a musical treasure that never ceased to grow in the new places where the Sephardic Jews settled. |
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http://www.hrmusic.com/discos/fdisc.html
(2345 words)
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| | Yahudice: Urban Ladino Music from Istanbul, Izmir, Thessalonica and Jerusalem / Yahudije |
 | | Hadass Pal-Yarden is an Israeli Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) singer and a doctoral student of Ethnomusicology. |  | | Yahudije, the name used for the Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) language of the Jewish population in the Ottoman times, reflected a simple reality: most Jewish people in the Ottoman Empire were of Spanish origin and spoke Ladino. |  | | She has performed in Israel and collaborated with the Ladino singer Ruth Yaakov in several performances in Israel and with the Turkish informant of Ladino music Berta Aguado. |
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http://www.cdroots.com/kalan-272.html
(900 words)
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| | Israelity » Ladino Flamenco |
 | | My friend Avi grew up speaking the language with his grandmother, whose family has lived in Jerusalem since a couple of centuries after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. |  | | Unlike Yiddish, however, it doesn’t even have a core of ultra-Orthodox people who speak the language to their children, as the hasidim do. |  | | This year she was nominated for a BBC3 “World Music Award,” and she is gradually gaining the international acclaim she deserves for her gorgeous musical interpretations. |
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http://www.israelity.com/index.php?p=30
(554 words)
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| | SFGate: Culture Blog! : Yasmin Levy and the Future of Ladino Music |
 | | Thirty years from now, no one will speak Ladino. |  | | This year, she was nominated for a BBC World Music Award (which are the Grammys of world music). |  | | A mixture of Spanish and Hebrew, Ladino is the language that Spanish Jews spoke for centuries until they were forced out Spain in 1492. |
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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=3&entry_id=485
(488 words)
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| | Urban Ladino Music from Istanbul, Thessalonica and Jerusalem |
 | | Over the past hundred years Ladino the dialect brought to the Ottoman Empire by Spanish Jews in the fifteenth century - has progressively been relegated to a lower-status dialect, the language of fishermen, as Pal-Yarden describes it. |  | | She offers the fourteen tracks as a gift to lovers of traditional musicÉwho want to know more about the stories behind the songs to see through them the world those songs once represented. |  | | SALONICA: CITY OF GHOSTS, by Mark Mazower (BOOK) |
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http://www.cornucopia.net/aboutulm.html
(347 words)
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| | Ladino Judeo-Spanish Welcome to Ladinokomunita |
 | | ws of the death of Judeo-Spanish (Ladino) have been greatly exaggerated. |  | | The members of this Internet chat group, who may reside hundreds and thousands of miles from each other on earth, have discusions with each other daily via e-mail in the language they all understand. |  | | Ask and answer questions and share information regarding the language, culture, history, and traditions of Sephardim; |
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http://www.sephardicstudies.org/komunita.html
(129 words)
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| | Sylvain's Web Page - La Page a Sylvain |
 | | A few words in Haketia -A form of Ladino spoken in Tangiers, Northern Morocco. |  | | If you would like to be notified when this page is updated with new material, just drop me a line. |  | | El Beso (not Ladino, but a popular spanish song) |
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http://www.geocities.com/Paris/6256/ladino.htm
(68 words)
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| | Amazon.ca: Search Results Books: Ladino |
 | | Making Jews Modern: The Yiddish and Ladino Press in the Russian and Ottoman Empires |  | | Treasury of Jewish Love: Poems, Quotations and Proverbs in Hebrew Yiddish, Ladino, and English |  | | Ladino Love Songs: Bride Unfastens Her Braids, the Groom Faints [Import] |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/external-search?tag=walladbcompan-20&keyword=Ladino&mode=books
(213 words)
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| | Behind the Name: Message: "Re: Yiddish and Ladino" |
 | | I couldn't find them on my habitually great fav Jewish names sites... |  | | Typical Ladino names are different in different countries. |  | | Some *very* typical ones could be: (all feminine, boys had Hebrew names) |
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http://www.behindthename.com/bb_gen/view.php?id=46876
(182 words)
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| | Press Release Sample |
 | | Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish, is the language that unified the Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492. |  | | Yitzhak Navon, the Fifth Israeli president and Director of the National Authority for Ladino Culture, and Carlos de Barcena Portoles, the Spanish Ambassador to Israel, attended the moving ceremony. |  | | The new Center will invite world-renowned researchers from the spheres of history, literature, language, customs and folklore of the Sephardic Jews, and will encourage and support various studies in the field. |
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http://www.bgu.ac.il/html/dover/news/1017124412.shtml
(271 words)
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| | Ladino (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Ladino: the Judæo-Spanish language, a Jewish language primarily spoken among Sephardic Jewish communities; historically the mother tongue of most Sephardim prior to the 1950s (other names exist for the language, but Ladino is one of the most prevalent). |  | | The Black Ladinos: a historical ethnic community consisting of Spanish-speaking black African slaves born in Latin America or sent to the Americas after having spent some time in Castille or Portugal. |  | | Ladino: a socio-ethnic category prevalent in some parts of Central America (especially Guatemala) applying to persons from the local population whose primary language is Spanish and practiced culture is Hispanic, whether mestizos or assimilated Amerindians. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ladino
(285 words)
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| | CD Baby: RICHARD BOTTON: Ladino Reverie |
 | | The songs on this record are in Ladino, the language of Sephardic Jews. |  | | This is a genuine Ladino collection of songs by a highly experienced Hazzan who grew up with Ladino in his ears and his soul. |  | | Raised in the Sephardic tradition, Richard Botton is the foremost interpreter of Ladino song. |
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http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/botton
(237 words)
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| | Suzy |
 | | Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish, is a very old language still spoken today by Turkish, Greek and Bulgarian Jews. |  | | The characteristic intonation of Ladino betrays its Iberian origins, where the Inquisition, coupled with a policy of savage anti-semitic persecution, induced a mass exodus of the Sephardi Jews to the eastern Mediterranean in the 15th century. |  | | Another Jewish cultural group, the Ashkenazim, has already conquered the world with their Klezmer music. |
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http://www.hrmusic.com/artists/suzart.html
(307 words)
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| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Ladino |
 | | The major ethnic groups in Guatemala are the Maya and the ladinos (Spanish for “Latins”), those of mixed Native American and European descent. |  | | Between 1502 and 1518, Spain shipped out hundreds of Spanish-born Africans, called Ladinos, to work as laborers, especially in the mines. |  | | Ladino, name used to indicate a variety of the Spanish language spoken (generally as a second or third language) in various parts of the world. |
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http://ca.encarta.msn.com/Ladino.html
(98 words)
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| | By The Sea Farms Stallions |
 | | Ladino was used in a trailering clinic held at their farm due to his calm temperament and willing attitude. |  | | Ladino was born 1-1-96 (dark bay) Sired by the beautiful black stallion Ebano VI (S/P) His Dam the exquisite mare |  | | In fact, the Young's liked him so much that they bred him to their sport-horse mare for a dressage prospect. |
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http://www.bytheseafarms.com/stallions.htm
(205 words)
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| | FORWARD : Arts & Letters |
 | | Not only did the Ladino-speaking countries never develop the yeshivas and great centers of rabbinical learning that characterized the Eastern-European Jewish world, but, in addition, the Spanish exiles arrived in them after a long period of cultural decline and Inquisitorial persecution in Spain itself that had seriously eroded their level of Jewish knowledge. |  | | Were this the case, the same thing should have happened between the Spanish exiles and the originally Greek-speaking Jews of the Byzantine Empire overrun by the Ottomans nearly all of whom, with the exception of a small population in northern Greece, eventually adopted Ladino as their language. |  | | Many pages of the new Ladino-English dictionary have no Hebrew-derived words in them at all, which raises the question of why this should be. |
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http://www.forward.com/issues/2001/01.03.02/arts.phil.html
(483 words)
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| | Ladino Publications in the Library of Congress: L |
 | | Hebrew, English, French, German, Greek, Ladino, Spanish, and Yiddish. |  | | Ladino Publications in the Library of Congress: L |  | | Lazar, Moshe; Dilligan, Robert J; Toledo A. Joseph and his brethren three Ladino versions. |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/becites/ladino/63062107l.html
(706 words)
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| | G4639 White, Ladino and Sweet Clover, MU Extension |
 | | Because of the infrequency of the problem, there are often reports that a non-bloating variety of white or ladino clover exists. |  | | Ladino clover is widely used for forage, especially in pasture. |  | | Ladino has at different times been designated as a variety (in Italy), as an ecotype of white clover and as a completely different kind of clover. |
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http://muextension.missouri.edu/explore/agguides/crops/g04639.htm
(2291 words)
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| | The Ladino Music Hall:Save The Ladino Music |
 | | Services, job offerings, articles, and news related to Ladino music and Jewish culture. |  | | From all over the world, we are receiving recordings. |  | | The Ladino Music Hall wouldn't be complete without honoring those who have contributed to enrich Ladino Music and Culture. |
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http://savethemusic.com/ladino
(517 words)
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| | A colloquium on Ladino at UNESCO: UNESCO |
 | | The permanent delegations of 11 UNESCO Member States* have organized a colloquium on the future of the Ladino language and culture, which will be held at UNESCO Headquarters on June 17 and 18. |  | | In cities such as Jerusalem, Salonika, Sofia, Constantinople or Smyrna, were born Judeao-Spanish communities which jealously protected the cultural heritage of their Spanish forebears. |  | | The Ladino language, based on 16th century Spanish, lives on but only just. |
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http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=4791&URL_DO=DO_PRINTPAGE&URL_SECTION=201.html
(228 words)
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| | Spanish Ladino Repertoire Books by Nico Castel |
 | | His knowledge and performances of Ladino music (the music of the Spanish Jews), is well-known and respected throughout the world. |  | | In the years that followed, his interest and connection with all music Spanish and Sephardic flowered and became one of his lifelong passions. |  | | Castel brings his vast knowledge and love for this repertoire to his fascinating and highly informative class, Spanish Lyric Diction and Spanish Vocal Repertoire offered in New York twice a year by the New York Opera Studio. |
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http://www.castelopera.com/ladino.asp
(323 words)
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| | Djudeo Espanyol........ Ladino..... Sepahardic Jews - DR1 Forums |
 | | This is probably not the best site to seek info on Ladino. |  | | The major Sephardic settlements in the Americas were in the Dutch colonies, including "New Amsterdam" (New York City), though I know there is a large one in Mexico City. |  | | how is the 'Ladino" language when compared to Spanish. |
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http://www.dr1.com/forums/showthread.php?t=19886
(112 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | Super temperments & Willingness to do is in his foals. |  | | Ladino is crossing beautifully with other breeds too many to list. |  | | He is producing goregous straight forward movers, loveley long necks, shoulders,heads & way of going to his foals. |
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http://www.acmehorses.com/horse_detail.aspx?HorseAdID=10003274
(112 words)
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| | Your Search Results for query ladino |
 | | This song is included in Dorit Reuveni's CD Ladino from 2000. |  | | This is a song in old Spanish with Hebrew words mixed in, but I think not. |
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http://www.zemerl.com/cgi-bin/search.pl?query=ladino&search.x=20&search.y=5
(100 words)
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| | New Ladino Music Today, by Eva Broman |
 | | My impression from listening to the clips was very positive—however, I'm a real novice when it comes to Ladino music, so it would be interesting to hear other views: |  | | Today I came across a Sephardi/Ladino CD which hasn't been mentioned here yet (if I'm to trust the list archives!). |  | | Recently there was a request on this list concerning new Ladino music. |
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http://www.klezmershack.com/articles/broman/2005newsephardic.html
(523 words)
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| | Sing Out! The Folk Song Magazine: Fortuna A Collection of Ladino Songs |
 | | Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. |  | | Fortuna is a Brazilian singer who discovered her personal connection with Sephardic (Judeo-Spanish) music and culture when she was already a professional singer on a concert tour in Israel in 1991. |  | | Subtract points for including the lyrics in English, German and French translation but not in the original Ladino. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1197/is_2_48/ai_n6059501
(433 words)
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