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Shuadit language
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Shuadit language : ウィキペディア英語版
Shuadit language

Judæo-Provençal, commonly referred to as Shuadit (also spelled Chouhadite, Chouhadit, Chouadite, Chouadit, and Shuhadit) is the extinct Jewish language that was used by the French Jews of southern France, also known as Judéo-Comtadin and Hébraïco-Comtadin. The language is known from documents dating to as early as the 11th century in France, and after suffering drastic declines beginning with the charter of the Inquisition in France, finally died out with the death of its last known speaker, Armand Lunel, in 1977.
==Early history==

Historians have been unable to clarify the age and the exact development of Judæo-Provençal. Latin, as the language of commerce and administration of the Roman Empire, spread to the region following the conquest of Transalpine Gaul by Julius Caesar, completed by 50 BC. There is, however, little evidence of whether Judæo-Provençal developed through the adoption and alteration of Latin by the local Jewish community, or whether it is a descendant of the much earlier Judæo-Latin language. Another possibility is that the language developed as a result of the influence of the exegetical school at Narbonne. (''For further discussion, refer to Blondheim and Banitt in References below.'')

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