The Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialect of Dohok is a dialect of Judeo-Aramaic originating from the Jewish community in Duhok, Iraqi Kurdistan.
The first records of a Jewish community in Duhok date to the late 19th century.
Judeo-Dohoki Aramaic was spoken by the Jewish community in Duhok until they were forced to flee to Israel.
This means that the youngest speakers are in their 60's or 70's and so the language is severely endangered.
[1] Judeo-Dohoki Aramaic has several unique features that distinguish it from other Northeastern Neo-Aramaic dialects which include: Having conservative and periphrastic tense-aspect-modal forms, competing past transitive constructions, and splitting eventive and stative copula clauses.