Qwara dialect

Endangered Qimant dialect spoken in Ethiopia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Qwara, or Qwareña (called "Falasha" (Hwarasa) in some older sources), was one of two Agaw dialects, spoken by a subgroup of the Beta Israel (Jews of Ethiopia) of Qwara Province. It is a dialect of Qimant. It is nearly extinct.[citation needed] Several early Falashan manuscripts, using the Ge'ez script, exist; in more recent times, the language has been recorded by several linguists and travellers, starting with Flad in 1866.

Quick Facts Native to, Region ...
Qwara
Qwareña
Native toEthiopia
RegionAmhara Region
EthnicityBeta Israel
Native speakers
L1: none since ca. 2000
L2: 3,200[citation needed]
Geʽez
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologhwar1238
ELPHwarasa
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Qwareña was on the decline in the early 20th century because it was being replaced by Amharic. During Operation Solomon, most of its remaining speakers were airlifted to Israel, where it continues to lose ground to Modern Hebrew.

See also

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Further reading

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