found: Bunis, D.M. A lexicon of the Hebrew and Aramaic elements in modern Judezmo, 1993.
found: Barton, T.I. Judezmo (Judeo Castilian) dictionary, 2008:What is Judezmo? (Judezmo is the language of the Sephardim Jews; also known as Judeo-Castilian (Ladino); the Judezmo language; over time Judeo-Castilian became known as Judeo-Spanish and around 1899 it became known as Ladino; the Jewish language known today as Ladino Sephardic; Ladino Sephardic is also known as Judeo-Espanyol or Judezmo)
found: Ethnologue, via WWW, Nov. 19, 2018(Ladino; a language of Israel; also spoken in Turkey; alternative names: Judeo Spanish, Judeo-Espagnol, Sefardi, Sephardic, Spanyol, Dzhudezmo, Haketia, Hakitia, Judezmo; location: Jerusalem district and scattered; classification: Indo-European, Italic, Romance, Italo-Western, Western, Gallo-Iberian, Ibero-Romance, West Iberian, Castilian; The name Dzhudezmo is used by Jewish linguists and Turkish Jews, Judeo-Spanish by Romance philologists, Ladino by laymen (especially in Israel), Hakitia by Moroccan Jews, Spanyol by some others)
found: Encyc. Britannica online, Nov. 19, 2018(Ladino language, also called Judeo-Spanish, Judesmo, or Sephardi, Romance language spoken by Sephardic Jews living mostly in Israel, the Balkans, North Africa, Greece, and Turkey. A very archaic form of Castilian Spanish mixed somewhat with Hebrew elements (as well as Aramaic, Arabic, Turkish, Greek, French, Bulgarian, and Italian), Ladino originated in Spain and was carried to its present speech areas by the descendants of the Spanish Jews who were expelled from Spain after 1492)