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  1. The Karaim language (Crimean dialect: къарай тили, qaray tili, לשון קדר; Trakai dialect: karaj tili), also known by its Hebrew name Lashon Kedar (Hebrew: לשון קדר ‎, “language of the nomads") is a Turkic language belonging to the Kipchak group, with Hebrew influences, similarly to Yiddish or Judaeo-Spanish.

    • 80 (2014)
  2. Die karaimische Sprache, kurz Karaimisch, ist eine Turksprache aus dem Zweig der kiptschakischen Sprachen. Sie wird von der ethnisch-religiösen Gruppe der Karäer gesprochen, die sich etwa im 8. Jahrhundert vom Judentum abgespalten hat und heute noch im Baltikum, Osteuropa, der Türkei und auch in Israel einige Anhänger hat. Das ...

    • 81 Sprecher (2014)
  3. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › KaräerKaräer – Wikipedia

    Heute werden sie meist Karaim, Karäim oder Karaiten genannt. Dieser Name stammt von der althebräischen Bezeichnung קרא kara , deutsch ‚lesen‘ ‚rezitieren‘ und dann kara מקרא in der Bedeutung „die (Heilige) Schrift lesen“.

  4. The Crimean Karaites or Krymkaraylar (Crimean Karaim: Кърымкъарайлар, Qrımqaraylar, singular къарай, qaray; Trakai dialect: karajlar, singular karaj; Hebrew: קראי מזרח אירופה; Crimean Tatar: Qaraylar; Yiddish: קרימישע קאַראַיִמער, romanized : krimishe karaimer ), also known as Karaims and Qarays, are an ethnicity of Turkic -speaking adherents of...

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  5. Karaim is a Turkic language spoken by about 60 people in Lithuania, Poland, and in Crimea and Galicia in Ukraine. It has three main dialects: Crimea (къарай тили), Trakai-Vilnius (karaj tili) and Lutsk-Halych (karay dili). The traditional name for the language is lashon kedar (לשון קדר‎) or "language of the nomads". In ...

  6. Karaite Judaism ( / ˈkɛərə.aɪt /) or Karaism ( / ˈkɛərə.ɪzəm /, sometimes spelt Karaitism ( / ˈkɛərə.ɪtɪzəm /; Hebrew: יהדות קראית Yahadut Qara'it ); also spelt Qaraite Judaism, Qaraism or Qaraitism) [a] is a Jewish religious movement characterized by the recognition of the written Tanakh alone as its supreme authority in halakha (Jewish religio...

  7. Karaim, traditionally known by its speakers as the Language of Qedar, is the Turkic language spoken by the Karaites of Eastern Europe, part of the Kipchak branch of the language family. The Karaite movement was first established in its modern form by ‘Anan ben David in eighth-century Babylonia, although its adherents trace it back to the ...