found: Benoliel, J. Diccionario básico jaquetía-espa̧nol, 2009.
found: Ethnologue, 16th ed.Ladino (Dialects: Haquetiya (Haketia, Haketiya, Hakitia))
found: Bentolila, Y. Diccionario del elemento hebreo en la ḥaketía, 2015:p. vii (Haketia, a Judeo-Spanish dialect that was spoken in the northern parts of Morocco and Algeria, among descendants of Jews originally expelled from Spain; a Spanish variety, enriched with words from Arabic and, being a Jewish language, Hebrew is also incorporated; unlike Judezmo, the Judeo-Spanish dialect that was used in the countries of the Ottoman Empire, Haketia has maintained contact with the Spanish of the Iberian Peninsula up to present times)
found: Ethnologue, via WWW, Dec. 17, 2018(under Ladino: dialects: Judezmo (Dzhudezmo, Jidyo, Judyo), Ladino, Haquetiya (Haketia, Haketiya, Hakitia); the name Hakitia is used by by Moroccan Jews)
found: Voces de Ḥaketía website, Dec. 17, 2018:home page (the Judeo-Spanish vernacular of Northern Morocco) about Voces (the Ḥaketía language; Ḥaketía is the Judeo-Spanish vernacular spoken primarily in Northern Morocco (Ladino being the liturgical language))
found: Jewish language research website, Dec. 17, 2018:Languages > Judeo-Spanish/Judezmo/Ladino (Judeo-Spanish is a language used by Jews originating from Spain. It flourished in the Ottoman Empire after the expulsion from Spain and continued its existence there. Some of the expelled Jews settled in North Africa and used the Judeo-Spanish variety known as Hakitia (Haketia)) Haketia (the influence of local (Muslim or Jewish) Arab dialects, together with the traditional Hebrew superstratum, resulted in the evolution of a Judeo-Spanish variant known as Haketia; the dialect also presents a higher written register, sharing in the general Judeo-Spanish (coiné) language common to the whole Sephardíc diaspora. In Morocco the name "Ladino" was reserved for this variety)
found: Judeo-Spanish and the making of a community, 2015:p. 113 (Ḥaketía, the lesser known of the Judeo-Spanish vernacular dialects (also spelled Ḥakitía, Ḥaquetía, or Jaquetía); although presently associated only with the communities of northern Morocco, in the past it has also been spoken in other Moroccan regions, Algeria, and Gibraltar)