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Some Related Sentences

** and Assyrian
** Assyrian Patriotic Party
** Assyrian Democratic Movement ( Zowaa Dimuqrataya Aturaya )- led by Yonadam Kanna
** Early Assyrian kingdom ( 24th to 18th c. BC )
** Middle Assyrian period ( 16th to 11th c. BC )
** Assyrian Empire ( ca.
** Ammo Baba, Assyrian soccer player
** Eastern Middle Syriac ( the literary and ecclesiastical language of Chaldean, Syro-Malabar and Assyrian Christians ),
** Belus ( Assyrian ): a purported king of Assyria in Greek historiography
** Belus ( Assyrian )
** adherents of the Assyrian Church of the East & Ancient Church of the East, always called Assyrians.
** Presbyterian, including the Assyrian Evangelical Church
** Pentecostal, including the Assyrian Pentecostal Church
** Assyrian / Syriac folk music
** the Old Assyrian period ( Middle Bronze Age )
** the Middle Assyrian period ( Late Bronze Age )
** Assyrian Church of the East

** and Neo-Aramaic
** Chaldean Neo-Aramaic

Assyrian and Neo-Aramaic
* Justin Perkins, an American Presbyterian missionary, produces the first translation of the Bible in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, which is published with the parallel text of the Syriac Peshitta by the American Bible Society.
* The first printed literature in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic is produced by Justin Perkins, an American Presbyterian missionary.
Rabshakeh, also Rab-shakeh and Rabsaces (; Rapsakēs ; ) Neo-Aramaic: () This name meaning chief of the princes was given to the chief cup-bearer or the vizier of the Assyrian royal court.
* The modern Assyrian Neo-Aramaic language
This language was most probably spoken by Jesus, and, in various modern forms is still spoken by the Assyrian Christians in Iran today ( see Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Senaya language ).
The only Semitic language spoken in the Caucasus is Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, spoken by around 30, 000 speakers, largely living in cities, who fled to Russia from Turkey in the aftermath of the Assyrian Genocide at the close of the First World War.
As spoken by the Kurdish Jews, Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialects are descended from Jewish Babylonian Aramaic, also known as " Assyrian lettering " ( Ktav Ashurit ), the " square-script ", by Ezra the Scribe, as could be seen from its hundreds of reflexes in Jewish Neo-Aramaic.
* In Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, it is called " dawghe "
* Assyrian Neo-Aramaic ( Aisor )
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic ( also known as Assyrian, Aisorski, Assyrianci, Assyriski, Lishana Aturaya, Neo-Syriac, Sooreth, Suret, Sureth, or Suryaya Swadaya ) is a Neo-Aramaic dialect, spoken by an estimated 220, 000 people ( 1994 SIL estimate ), formerly in the area between Lake Urmia, north-western Iran, northern Iraq, north-eastern Syria and Siirt, south-eastern Turkey, but now more widely throughout the Assyrian – Chaldean – Syriac diaspora.
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic is to a considerable extent mutually intelligible with Chaldean Neo-Aramaic and to a lesser extent with Turoyo.
The division of the Assyrian from Chaldean Neo-Aramaic was a consequence of the religious schism of 1552 which led to the formation of the Assyrian Church of the East.
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic is one of a number of modern Eastern Aramaic dialects spoken in the region between Lake Urmia in Iranian Azerbaijan and Mosul in northern Iraq.
Russian linguists studied Assyrian Neo-Aramaic as spoken by immigrant speakers in Georgia and Armenia at the end of the 19th century.
The Urmia dialect has become the prestige dialect of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic after 1836, when that dialect was chosen by Justin Perkins, an American Presbyterian missionary, for the creation of a standard literary dialect of Assyrian.

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