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Hazaragi dialect

Hazaragi (Persian: هزارگی, romanizedhəzārəgi; Hazaragi: آزرگی, romanized: āzərgi) is an eastern dialect and variety of the Persian language[5][6] that is spoken by the Hazara people, primarily in the Hazaristan (Hazarajat) region of central Afghanistan, as well as other Hazara-populated areas of Afghanistan. Hazaragi is also spoken by the Hazaras of Pakistan and Iran, and also by the Hazara diaspora living elsewhere.

Hazaragi
آزرگی
هزارگی
Hazāragi, Āzargi and Azargi written in the Perso-Arabic script
Native toAfghanistan[1]
RegionHazaristan and other Hazara-populated areas
EthnicityHazaras
Native speakers
3,660,000 (2017)[2]
Perso-Arabic Script, Latin alphabet[3][4]
Language codes
ISO 639-3haz
Glottologhaza1239

Classification edit

Hazaragi is a member of the Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. It is an eastern variety of Persian and closely related to Dari, one of the two official Languages of Afghanistan. The primary differences between Dari and Hazaragi are the accents[7] and Hazaragi's greater array of many Turkic and a few Mongolic words and loanwords.[8][9][10][11] Despite these differences, the two dialects are mutually intelligible.[12]

In Daykundi (former Uruzgan), Hazaragi has a significant admixture of Altaic influence in the language via Karluk.[13]

Geographic distribution and diaspora edit

Hazaragi is spoken by the Hazara people, who mainly live in Afghanistan (predominantly in the Hazarajat region, as well as in major urban areas), with a significant population in Pakistan (particularly Quetta) and Iran (particularly Mashhad),[14] and by Hazara diaspora in eastern Uzbekistan, northern Tajikistan, the Americas, Europe, and Australia.[15] The number of Hazaragi speakers in Iran increased significantly due to the influx of refugees from Afghanistan where there are an estimated 399,000 speakers in the country as of 2021.[16]

In recent years, a substantial population of Hazara refugees have settled in Australia, prompting the Department of Immigration and Citizenship to move towards an official recognition of the Hazaragi language. Currently, NAATI (National Accreditation Authority for Translators and Interpreters) holds interpreting tests for Hazaragi as a distinct language, noting in test materials that Hazaragi varies by dialect, and that any dialect of Hazaragi may be used in interpreter testing as long as it would be understood by the average speaker. The test materials also note that Hazaragi in some locations has been significantly influenced by surrounding languages, and that the use of non-Hazaragi words assimilated from neighboring languages would be penalized in testing.[17]

History edit

Persian and Islam edit

The Persian language became so much part of the religion of Islam that it almost went wherever Islam took roots.[citation needed] Persian entered, in this way, into the very faith and thought of the people embracing Islam throughout South Asia.[18]

Turkic and Mongolic influence edit

Over the time, some of the Turkic and Mongolic languages died out in Afghanistan as living languages amongst some Hazaras. However, Hazaragi contains many Turkic and a few Mongolic loanwords.[18][10]

Grammatical structure edit

The grammatical structure of Hazaragi[19][20][21] is practically identical with that of the Kabuli dialect of Persian.[22][23]

Phonology edit

Vowel phonemes of Hazaragi[24]
Front Back
High i u
ʊ
Mid e ɔ
Low a

/a/ can also approach the sound [æ] or [ɛ].[24]

As a group of eastern Persian varieties which are considered the more formal and classical varieties of Persian,[citation needed] Hazaragi retains the voiced fricative [ɣ], and the bilabial articulation of [w] has borrowed the (rare)[clarification needed] retroflexes [ʈ] and [ɖ]; as in buṭ (meaning "boot") vs. but (meaning "idol") (cf. Persian bot); and rarely articulates [h].[25] The convergence of voiced uvular stop [ɢ] (ق) and voiced velar fricative [ɣ] (غ) in Western Persian (probably under the influence of Turkic languages)[26] is still kept separate in Hazara.

Diphthongs include [aj], [aw], and [ēw] (cf. Persian ab, āb, ûw). The vocalic system is typically eastern Persian, characterized by the loss of length distinction, the retention of mid vowels, and the rounding of [ā] and [å/o], alternating with its merger with [a], or [û] (cf. Persian ān).[25][clarification needed]

Stress is dynamic and similar to that in Dari[27] and Tajik varieties of Persian,[28] and not variable.[29] It generally falls on the last syllable of a nominal form, including derivative suffixes and a number of morphological markers. Typical is the insertion of epenthetic vowels in consonant clusters (as in pašm to póšum; "wool") and final devoicing (as in ḵût; "self, own").[25]

[h] only occurs infrequently, and among more educated speakers. /r/ can be heard as either a trill [r] or a tap [ɾ]. /x, ɣ/ can also range to uvular sounds [χ, ʁ].

Nominal morphology edit

The most productive derivative marker is -i, and the plural markers are -o for the inanimate (as in kitab-o, meaning "books"; cf. Persian -hā) and for the animate (as in birar-û, meaning "brothers"; cf. Persian -ān). The emphatic vocative marker is û or -o, the indefinite marker is -i, and the specific object marker is -(r)a. The comparative marker is -tar (as in kalû-tar, meaning "bigger"). Dependent adjectives and nouns follow the head noun and are connected by -i (as in kitab-i mamud, meaning "the book of Maḥmud"). Topicalized possessors precede the head noun marked by the resumptive personal suffix (as in Zulmay ayê-ši, literally "Zulmay her mother"). Prepositions include, in addition to the standard Persian ones, ḵun(i) (meaning "with, by means of", da (meaning "in"; cf. Persian dar); the latter often replaces ba (meaning "to") in dative function. Loaned postpositions include comitative -qati (meaning "together with") and (az) -worî (meaning "like"). Interrogatives typically function also as indefinites (as in kudam, meaning "which, someone").[25]

Pronouns in Hazaragi[25] [English] (Persian - Ironik)
Singular/Plural First person Second person Third person
singular ma [me, I] (man) tu [you] (tu) e/u [this/that] (w)
plural [we, us] (mo) šimû/šumû (cumo) yo/wo [these/those] (icon)
singular -um [mine] -em -it/khu/–tû [your/yours] (-et) -iš/-(i)ši [his/hers] (-ec)
plural -mû [ours] (-emon) –tû/-šimû/šumû [your/yours] (-eton) -iš/-(i)ši [their] (-econ)

The inflection (u,o) that Hazaras use to pluralize nouns is Also found in Avesta, Yashts such as Aryo.

Particles, conjunctions, modals, and adverbials edit

These include atê/arê, meaning "yes"; amma or wali, meaning "but"; balki, meaning "however"; šaydi, meaning "perhaps"; ale, meaning "now"; and wuḵt-a, meaning "then". These are also marked by distinctive initial stress.[25]

Hazaragi particles, conjunctions, modals, and adverbials
Hazaragi Persian/Dari English
Amyale aknun now
dalil'dera dalil darad maybe

Verb morphology edit

The imperfective marker is mi- (assimilated variants: m-, mu-, m-, mê-; as in mi-zan-um, "I hit, I am hitting"). The subjunctive and imperative marker is bi- (with similar assimilation). The negation is na- (as in na-mi-zad-um, "I was not hitting"). These usually attract stress.[25]

Tenses edit

The tense, mood, and aspect system is typically quite different from western Persian. The basic tense system is threefold: present-future, past, and remote (pluperfect). New modal paradigms developed in addition to the subjunctives:

  • The non-seen/mirative that originates in the resultative-stative perfect (e.g., zad-ēm; cf. Persian zada(e) am), which has largely lost its non-modal use;
  • the potential, or assumptive, which is marked by the invariant ḵot (cf. Persian xāh-ad or xād, "it wants, intends") combined with the indicate and subjunctive forms.

Moreover, all past and remote forms have developed imperfective forms marked by mi-. There are doubts about several of the less commonly found, or recorded, forms, in particular those with ḵot.[30] However, the systematic arrangement of all forms according to their morphological, as well as semantic, function shows that those forms fit well within the overall pattern. The system may tentatively be shown as follows (all forms are 1st sing), leaving out complex compound forms such as zada ḵot mu-buda baš-um.[25]

In the assumptive, the distinction appears to be not between present versus past, but indefinite versus definite. Also, similar to all Persian varieties, the imperfective forms in mi-, and past perfect forms, such as mi-zad-um and zada bud-um, are used in irreal conditional clauses and wishes; e.g., kaški zimi qulba kadagi mu-but, "If the field would only be/have been plowed!" Modal verbs, such as tan- ("can"), are constructed with the perfect participle; e.g., ma bû-r-um, da čaman rasid-a ḵot tanist-um, "I shall go, and may be able to get to Čaman". Participial nominalization is typical, both with the perfect participle (e.g., kad-a, "(having) done") and with the derived participle with passive meaning kad-ag-i, "having been done" (e.g., zimin-i qulba kada-ya, "The field is ploughed"; zamin-i qulba (na-)šuda-ra mi-ngar-um, "I am looking at a plowed/unplowed field"; imrûz [u ḵondagi] tikrar mu-kun-a, "Today he repeats (reading) what he had read"). The gerundive (e.g., kad-an-i, "to be done") is likewise productive, as in yag čiz, ki uftadani baš-a, ma u-ra qad-dist-ḵu girift-um, tulḡa kad-um, "One object, that was about to fall, I grabbed, and held it". The clitic -ku or -ḵu topicalizes parts of speech, -di the predicate; as in i-yši raft, ma-ḵu da ḵona mand-um, "He himself left; I, though, I stayed".[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Emadi, Hafizullah (2005). Culture and Customs of Afghanistan. ISBN 9780313330896.
  2. ^ Hazaragi at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023)  
  3. ^ "Hazaragi language, alphabet and pronunciation".
  4. ^ Mai ve siyah: [milli] roman [Blue and Black : A national novel]. Hilminin koleksiyonu. Vol. 43. Hilmi Kitabevi. 1938.
  5. ^ "HAZĀRA iv. Hazāragi dialect". Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  6. ^ "Attitudes towards Hazaragi". Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  7. ^ Schurmann, Franz (1962) The Mongols of Afghanistan: An Ethnography of the Moghôls and Related Peoples of Afghanistan Mouton, The Hague, Netherlands, page 17, OCLC 401634
  8. ^ "Language of the "Mountain Tribe": A Closer Look at Hazaragi - Languages Of The World". Languages Of The World. 2011-12-12. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
  9. ^ "A Sociological Study of Hazara Tribe in Balochistan (An Analysis of Socio-Cultural Change) University of Karachi, Pakistan July 1976 p.302". Eprints.hec.gov.pk. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  10. ^ a b Monsutti, Alessandro (2017-07-01), "Hazāras", Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Brill, retrieved 2021-10-08
  11. ^ Charles M. Kieffer, "HAZĀRA iv. Hazāragi dialect," Encyclopedia Iranica Online Edition, December 15, 2003, available at [1]
  12. ^ "Attitudes Towards Hazaragi". Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  13. ^ دلجو, عباس (2014). تاریخ باستانی هزاره‌ها. کابل: انتشارات امیری. ISBN 978-9936801509.
  14. ^ Area Handbook for Afghanistan, page 77, Harvey Henry Smith, American University (Washington, D.C.) Foreign Area Studies
  15. ^ Barbara A. West. "Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania". pp 272. Info base Publishing, 2009. ISBN 1438119135
  16. ^ "Hazaragi". Ethnologue. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  17. ^ Accreditation by Testing: Information booklet. NAATI, VERSION 1.10- August 2010
  18. ^ a b "A Sociological Study of Hazara Tribe in Balochistan (An Analysis of Socio-Cultural Change) University of Karachi, Pakistan July 1976". Eprints.hec.gov.pk. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  19. ^ Valentin Aleksandrovich Efimov, Yazyk afganskikh khazara: Yakavlangskii dialect, Moscow, 1965. pp. 22-83
  20. ^ Idem, “Khazara yazyk,” in Yazyki mira. Iranskiĭ yazyki I: yugo-zapadnye iranskiĭ yazyki, Moscow, 1997, pp. 154-66.
  21. ^ G. K. Dulling, The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian: A Preliminary Study, Central Asian Monograph 1, London, 1973. pp. 29-41
  22. ^ A. G. Ravan Farhadi, Le persan parlé en Afghanistan: Grammaire du kâboli accompagnée d’un recuil de quatrains populaires de région de Kâbol, Paris, 1955.
  23. ^ Idem, The Spoken Dari of Afghanistan: A Grammar of Kāboli Dari (Persian), Compared to the Literary Language, Kabul, 1975
  24. ^ a b c Efimov, V. A. (2008). Xazara. In V. A. Efimov (ed.), Sredneiranskie i novoiranskie Jazyki: Moskva: Izdatel'stvo Firma Vostočnaya Literatura RAN. pp. 344–414.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Charles M. Kieffer. "HAZĀRA iv. Hazāragi dialect". Iranica. p. 1. Retrieved September 15, 2011.
  26. ^ A. Pisowicz, Origins of the New and Middle Persian phonological systems (Cracow 1985), p. 112-114, 117.
  27. ^ Farhadi, Le persan parlé en Afghanistan: Grammaire du kâboli accompagnée d’un recuil de quatrains populaires de région de Kâbol, Paris, 1955, pp. 64-67
  28. ^ V. S.Rastorgueva, A Short Sketch of Tajik Grammar, tr. Herbert H. Paper, Bloomington, Ind., and The Hague, 1963, pp. 9-10
  29. ^ G. K. Dulling, The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian: A Preliminary Study, Central Asian Monograph 1, London, 1973. p. 37
  30. ^ G. K. Dulling, The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian: A Preliminary Study, Central Asian Monograph 1, London, 1973. pp. 35-36

External links edit

  • Hazaragi Translation Services

hazaragi, dialect, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, addi. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Hazaragi Persian هزارگی romanized hezaregi Hazaragi آزرگی romanized azergi is an eastern dialect and variety of the Persian language 5 6 that is spoken by the Hazara people primarily in the Hazaristan Hazarajat region of central Afghanistan as well as other Hazara populated areas of Afghanistan Hazaragi is also spoken by the Hazaras of Pakistan and Iran and also by the Hazara diaspora living elsewhere Hazaragiآزرگی هزارگیHazaragi Azargi and Azargi written in the Perso Arabic scriptNative toAfghanistan 1 RegionHazaristan and other Hazara populated areasEthnicityHazarasNative speakers3 660 000 2017 2 Language familyIndo European Indo IranianIranianWestern IranianSouthwestern IranianPersian eastern HazaragiWriting systemPerso Arabic Script Latin alphabet 3 4 Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code haz class extiw title iso639 3 haz haz a Glottologhaza1239 Contents 1 Classification 2 Geographic distribution and diaspora 3 History 3 1 Persian and Islam 4 Turkic and Mongolic influence 5 Grammatical structure 5 1 Phonology 5 2 Nominal morphology 5 3 Particles conjunctions modals and adverbials 5 4 Verb morphology 5 5 Tenses 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksClassification editHazaragi is a member of the Iranian branch of the Indo European language family It is an eastern variety of Persian and closely related to Dari one of the two official Languages of Afghanistan The primary differences between Dari and Hazaragi are the accents 7 and Hazaragi s greater array of many Turkic and a few Mongolic words and loanwords 8 9 10 11 Despite these differences the two dialects are mutually intelligible 12 In Daykundi former Uruzgan Hazaragi has a significant admixture of Altaic influence in the language via Karluk 13 Geographic distribution and diaspora editSee also Hazara diaspora Hazaragi is spoken by the Hazara people who mainly live in Afghanistan predominantly in the Hazarajat region as well as in major urban areas with a significant population in Pakistan particularly Quetta and Iran particularly Mashhad 14 and by Hazara diaspora in eastern Uzbekistan northern Tajikistan the Americas Europe and Australia 15 The number of Hazaragi speakers in Iran increased significantly due to the influx of refugees from Afghanistan where there are an estimated 399 000 speakers in the country as of 2021 16 In recent years a substantial population of Hazara refugees have settled in Australia prompting the Department of Immigration and Citizenship to move towards an official recognition of the Hazaragi language Currently NAATI National Accreditation Authority for Translators and Interpreters holds interpreting tests for Hazaragi as a distinct language noting in test materials that Hazaragi varies by dialect and that any dialect of Hazaragi may be used in interpreter testing as long as it would be understood by the average speaker The test materials also note that Hazaragi in some locations has been significantly influenced by surrounding languages and that the use of non Hazaragi words assimilated from neighboring languages would be penalized in testing 17 History editPersian and Islam edit See also Muslim conquest of Persia The Persian language became so much part of the religion of Islam that it almost went wherever Islam took roots citation needed Persian entered in this way into the very faith and thought of the people embracing Islam throughout South Asia 18 Turkic and Mongolic influence editOver the time some of the Turkic and Mongolic languages died out in Afghanistan as living languages amongst some Hazaras However Hazaragi contains many Turkic and a few Mongolic loanwords 18 10 Grammatical structure editThe grammatical structure of Hazaragi 19 20 21 is practically identical with that of the Kabuli dialect of Persian 22 23 Phonology edit Vowel phonemes of Hazaragi 24 Front BackHigh i uʊMid e ɔLow a a can also approach the sound ae or ɛ 24 As a group of eastern Persian varieties which are considered the more formal and classical varieties of Persian citation needed Hazaragi retains the voiced fricative ɣ and the bilabial articulation of w has borrowed the rare clarification needed retroflexes ʈ and ɖ as in buṭ meaning boot vs but meaning idol cf Persian bot and rarely articulates h 25 The convergence of voiced uvular stop ɢ ق and voiced velar fricative ɣ غ in Western Persian probably under the influence of Turkic languages 26 is still kept separate in Hazara Diphthongs include aj aw and ew cf Persian ab ab uw The vocalic system is typically eastern Persian characterized by the loss of length distinction the retention of mid vowels and the rounding of a and a o alternating with its merger with a or u cf Persian an 25 clarification needed Stress is dynamic and similar to that in Dari 27 and Tajik varieties of Persian 28 and not variable 29 It generally falls on the last syllable of a nominal form including derivative suffixes and a number of morphological markers Typical is the insertion of epenthetic vowels in consonant clusters as in pasm to posum wool and final devoicing as in ḵut self own 25 Consonant phonemes of Hazaragi 24 25 Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palato alveolar Velar Uvular GlottalNasal m nPlosive Affricate voiceless p t ʈ tʃ k qvoiced b d ɖ dʒ ɡFlap Trill rFricative voiceless f s ʃ x h voiced z ʒ ɣApproximant w l j h only occurs infrequently and among more educated speakers r can be heard as either a trill r or a tap ɾ x ɣ can also range to uvular sounds x ʁ Nominal morphology edit The most productive derivative marker is i and the plural markers are o for the inanimate as in kitab o meaning books cf Persian ha and u for the animate as in birar u meaning brothers cf Persian an The emphatic vocative marker is u or o the indefinite marker is i and the specific object marker is r a The comparative marker is tar as in kalu tar meaning bigger Dependent adjectives and nouns follow the head noun and are connected by i as in kitab i mamud meaning the book of Maḥmud Topicalized possessors precede the head noun marked by the resumptive personal suffix as in Zulmay aye si literally Zulmay her mother Prepositions include in addition to the standard Persian ones ḵun i meaning with by means of da meaning in cf Persian dar the latter often replaces ba meaning to in dative function Loaned postpositions include comitative qati meaning together with and az wori meaning like Interrogatives typically function also as indefinites as in kudam meaning which someone 25 Pronouns in Hazaragi 25 English Persian Ironik Singular Plural First person Second person Third personsingular ma me I man tu you tu e u this that w plural mu we us mo simu sumu cumo yo wo these those icon singular um mine em it khu tu your yours et is i si his hers ec plural mu ours emon tu simu sumu your yours eton is i si their econ The inflection u o that Hazaras use to pluralize nouns is Also found in Avesta Yashts such as Aryo Particles conjunctions modals and adverbials edit These include ate are meaning yes amma or wali meaning but balki meaning however saydi meaning perhaps ale meaning now and wuḵt a meaning then These are also marked by distinctive initial stress 25 Hazaragi particles conjunctions modals and adverbials Hazaragi Persian Dari EnglishAmyale aknun nowdalil dera dalil darad maybeVerb morphology edit The imperfective marker is mi assimilated variants m mu m me as in mi zan um I hit I am hitting The subjunctive and imperative marker is bi with similar assimilation The negation is na as in na mi zad um I was not hitting These usually attract stress 25 Tenses edit The tense mood and aspect system is typically quite different from western Persian The basic tense system is threefold present future past and remote pluperfect New modal paradigms developed in addition to the subjunctives The non seen mirative that originates in the resultative stative perfect e g zad em cf Persian zada e am which has largely lost its non modal use the potential or assumptive which is marked by the invariant ḵot cf Persian xah ad or xad it wants intends combined with the indicate and subjunctive forms Moreover all past and remote forms have developed imperfective forms marked by mi There are doubts about several of the less commonly found or recorded forms in particular those with ḵot 30 However the systematic arrangement of all forms according to their morphological as well as semantic function shows that those forms fit well within the overall pattern The system may tentatively be shown as follows all forms are 1st sing leaving out complex compound forms such as zada ḵot mu buda bas um 25 In the assumptive the distinction appears to be not between present versus past but indefinite versus definite Also similar to all Persian varieties the imperfective forms in mi and past perfect forms such as mi zad um and zada bud um are used in irreal conditional clauses and wishes e g kaski zimi qulba kadagi mu but If the field would only be have been plowed Modal verbs such as tan can are constructed with the perfect participle e g ma bu r um da caman rasid a ḵot tanist um I shall go and may be able to get to Caman Participial nominalization is typical both with the perfect participle e g kad a having done and with the derived participle with passive meaning kad ag i having been done e g zimin i qulba kada ya The field is ploughed zamin i qulba na suda ra mi ngar um I am looking at a plowed unplowed field imruz u ḵondagi tikrar mu kun a Today he repeats reading what he had read The gerundive e g kad an i to be done is likewise productive as in yag ciz ki uftadani bas a ma u ra qad dist ḵu girift um tulḡa kad um One object that was about to fall I grabbed and held it The clitic ku or ḵu topicalizes parts of speech di the predicate as in i ysi raft ma ḵu da ḵona mand um He himself left I though I stayed 25 See also edit nbsp Languages portalAimaq dialectReferences edit Emadi Hafizullah 2005 Culture and Customs of Afghanistan ISBN 9780313330896 Hazaragi at Ethnologue 26th ed 2023 nbsp Hazaragi language alphabet and pronunciation Mai ve siyah milli roman Blue and Black A national novel Hilminin koleksiyonu Vol 43 Hilmi Kitabevi 1938 HAZARA iv Hazaragi dialect Retrieved 5 June 2014 Attitudes towards Hazaragi Retrieved 5 June 2014 Schurmann Franz 1962 The Mongols of Afghanistan An Ethnography of the Moghols and Related Peoples of Afghanistan Mouton The Hague Netherlands page 17 OCLC 401634 Language of the Mountain Tribe A Closer Look at Hazaragi Languages Of The World Languages Of The World 2011 12 12 Retrieved 2018 08 14 A Sociological Study of Hazara Tribe in Balochistan An Analysis of Socio Cultural Change University of Karachi Pakistan July 1976 p 302 Eprints hec gov pk Retrieved 2013 12 08 a b Monsutti Alessandro 2017 07 01 Hazaras Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill retrieved 2021 10 08 Charles M Kieffer HAZARA iv Hazaragi dialect Encyclopedia Iranica Online Edition December 15 2003 available at 1 Attitudes Towards Hazaragi Retrieved 4 June 2014 دلجو عباس 2014 تاریخ باستانی هزاره ها کابل انتشارات امیری ISBN 978 9936801509 Area Handbook for Afghanistan page 77 Harvey Henry Smith American University Washington D C Foreign Area Studies Barbara A West Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania pp 272 Info base Publishing 2009 ISBN 1438119135 Hazaragi Ethnologue Retrieved 5 October 2023 Accreditation by Testing Information booklet NAATI VERSION 1 10 August 2010 a b A Sociological Study of Hazara Tribe in Balochistan An Analysis of Socio Cultural Change University of Karachi Pakistan July 1976 Eprints hec gov pk Retrieved 2013 12 08 Valentin Aleksandrovich Efimov Yazyk afganskikh khazara Yakavlangskii dialect Moscow 1965 pp 22 83 Idem Khazara yazyk in Yazyki mira Iranskiĭ yazyki I yugo zapadnye iranskiĭ yazyki Moscow 1997 pp 154 66 G K Dulling The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian A Preliminary Study Central Asian Monograph 1 London 1973 pp 29 41 A G Ravan Farhadi Le persan parle en Afghanistan Grammaire du kaboli accompagnee d un recuil de quatrains populaires de region de Kabol Paris 1955 Idem The Spoken Dari of Afghanistan A Grammar of Kaboli Dari Persian Compared to the Literary Language Kabul 1975 a b c Efimov V A 2008 Xazara In V A Efimov ed Sredneiranskie i novoiranskie Jazyki Moskva Izdatel stvo Firma Vostocnaya Literatura RAN pp 344 414 a b c d e f g h i j Charles M Kieffer HAZARA iv Hazaragi dialect Iranica p 1 Retrieved September 15 2011 A Pisowicz Origins of the New and Middle Persian phonological systems Cracow 1985 p 112 114 117 Farhadi Le persan parle en Afghanistan Grammaire du kaboli accompagnee d un recuil de quatrains populaires de region de Kabol Paris 1955 pp 64 67 V S Rastorgueva A Short Sketch of Tajik Grammar tr Herbert H Paper Bloomington Ind and The Hague 1963 pp 9 10 G K Dulling The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian A Preliminary Study Central Asian Monograph 1 London 1973 p 37 G K Dulling The Hazaragi Dialect of Afghan Persian A Preliminary Study Central Asian Monograph 1 London 1973 pp 35 36External links edit nbsp Hazaragi dialect test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator Hazaragi Translation Services Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hazaragi dialect amp oldid 1182462417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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