![Western Neo-Aramaic as an Islamic Language? A Look at Some Lexical and Sociolinguistic Issues in: Eurasian Studies Volume 18 Issue 1 (2020) Western Neo-Aramaic as an Islamic Language? A Look at Some Lexical and Sociolinguistic Issues in: Eurasian Studies Volume 18 Issue 1 (2020)](https://brill.com/view/journals/eurs/18/1/24685623_018_01_s007_i0001.jpg)
Western Neo-Aramaic as an Islamic Language? A Look at Some Lexical and Sociolinguistic Issues in: Eurasian Studies Volume 18 Issue 1 (2020)
![Benjamin Suchard on X: "In the dialects of Late Antiquity, we see some traces of this feature in Western Aramaic. In the East, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic undergoes it quite regularly, but #Syriac ( Benjamin Suchard on X: "In the dialects of Late Antiquity, we see some traces of this feature in Western Aramaic. In the East, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic undergoes it quite regularly, but #Syriac (](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DrT2h0JWwAADmDK.jpg)
Benjamin Suchard on X: "In the dialects of Late Antiquity, we see some traces of this feature in Western Aramaic. In the East, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic undergoes it quite regularly, but #Syriac (
![Syria. Maaloula. Town built into the rugged mountainside. Village where Western Aramaic is still spoken. Near East. Photo taken before Syrian Civil War Stock Photo - Alamy Syria. Maaloula. Town built into the rugged mountainside. Village where Western Aramaic is still spoken. Near East. Photo taken before Syrian Civil War Stock Photo - Alamy](https://c8.alamy.com/comp/RA226E/syria-maaloula-town-built-into-the-rugged-mountainside-village-where-western-aramaic-is-still-spoken-near-east-photo-taken-before-syrian-civil-war-RA226E.jpg)