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Lebanese cuisine has ancient roots and is part of the culinary tradition of the Eastern Mediterranean. Many dishes in Lebanese cuisine can be traced back thousands of years to eras of Phoenician, Persian, Egyptian, Neo-Babylonian, Roman, Greek, Byzantine, Arab and Ottoman rule.
Under the current Lebanese nationality law, diaspora Lebanese do not have an automatic right of return to Lebanon. Due to varying degrees of assimilation and high degree of interethnic marriages, most diaspora Lebanese have not passed on the Arabic language to their children, while still maintaining a Lebanese ethnic identity.
More recently, some effort has been put into revitalizing Aramaic as an everyday spoken language in some ethnic Lebanese communities. [17] Also, the modern languages of Eastern Aramaic have an estimated 2–5 million speakers, mainly among Assyrians , [ 18 ] an ethnic group related to but distinct from the Maronites of Lebanon.
Despite the ethnic, linguistic, religious and denominational diversity of the Lebanese, they "share an almost common culture". [356] Lebanese Arabic is universally spoken while food, music, and literature are deep-rooted "in wider Mediterranean and Levantine norms".
This category lists categories and articles about various ethnic groups related to Lebanon ... Lebanese culture by ethnicity (3 C) A. Antiochian Greek Christians (2 C
Income by Race and Ethnicity and Hispanic/Latino origins 2023 Income by race and ethnicity 2023 (Household and Per Capita) Asian Americans [1] This is a list of median household income in the United States ranked by ethnicity and Native American tribal grouping (as of 2021) according to the United States Census .
The Syrian Lebanese in America: A Study in Religion and Assimilation (Twayne, 1975). Price, Jay M., and Sue Abdinnour, "Family, Ethnic Entrepreneurship, and the Lebanese of Kansas," Great Plains Quarterly, 33 (Summer 2013), 161–88. Shakir, Evelyn. Remember Me to Lebanon: Stories of Lebanese Women in America (Syracuse University Press, 2007).
Varying degrees of assimilation and a high degree of inter-ethnic marriages in the Lebanese diaspora communities, regardless of religious affiliation, have caused many of the Lebanese diaspora not to have passed fluency in Arabic to their children, although most still maintain a Lebanese national identity. Several factors have caused Lebanese ...