翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Pampa News
・ Pampa Oilers
・ Pampa Passage
・ Pampa Sarovar
・ Pampa Wind Farm
・ Pampa Wind Project
・ Pampa y cielo
・ Pampa, Texas
・ Pampa, Texas micropolitan area
・ Pampa, Virginia
・ Pampachiri
・ Pampacolca District
・ Pampadromaeus
・ Pampadum Shola National Park
・ Pamir Kabul F.C.
Pamir languages
・ Pamir Mountains
・ Pamir National Park
・ Pamir River
・ Pamir Stadium
・ Pamir University
・ Pamir-Alay
・ Pamirdin
・ Pamiri
・ Pamiri rubab
・ Pamirid race
・ Pamirioceras
・ Pamiris
・ Pamirorea
・ Pamisos


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Pamir languages : ウィキペディア英語版
Pamir languages

The Pamir languages are an areal group of the Eastern Iranian languages, spoken by numerous people in the Pamir Mountains, primarily along the Panj River and its tributaries. This includes the Badakhshan Province of Northeastern Afghanistan and the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province of Eastern Tajikistan. Pamir communities are also be found in the adjacent Chitral District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gojal, Gilgit Baltistan in Pakistan. Sarikoli, one of the languages of the Pamir group, is spoken beyond the Sarikol Range on the Afghanistan-China border, and thus qualifies as the easternmost of the extant Iranian languages. The only other living member of the Southeastern Iranian group is Pashto.
No features uniting the Pamir languages as a single subgroup of Iranian have been demonstrated.〔Antje Wendtland (2009), ''The position of the Pamir languages within East Iranian'', (Orientalia Suecana LVIII )〕 The Ethnologue lists Pamir languages along with Pashto as Southeastern Iranian,〔(Southeastern Iranian Family Tree ). SIL International. Ethnologue: Languages of the World.〕 however, according to Encyclopedia Iranica, Pamir languages and Pashto belong to the North-Eastern Iranian branch.〔Nicholas Sims-Williams, (Eastern Iranian languages ), in Encyclopaedia Iranica, Online Edition, 2010. ''"The Modern Eastern Iranian languages are even more numerous and varied. Most of them are classified as North-Eastern: Ossetic; Yaghnobi (which derives from a dialect closely related to Sogdian); the Shughni group (Shughni, Roshani, Khufi, Bartangi, Roshorvi, Sarikoli), with which Yaz-1ghulami (Sokolova 1967) and the now extinct Wanji (J. Payne in Schmitt, p. 420) are closely linked; Ishkashmi, Sanglichi, and Zebaki; Wakhi; Munji and Yidgha; and Pashto."''〕 Members of the Pamir language area include four reliable groups: a Shughni–Yazgulyam group including Shughni, Sarikoli, and Yazgulyam; Munji and Yidgha; Ishkamimi and related dialects; and Wakhi. They have the subject–object–verb syntactic typology.
The vast majority of Pamir languages speakers in Tajikistan and Afghanistan also use Tajik (Persian) as literary language, which is—unlike the languages of the Pamir group—a Southwestern Iranian tongue. The language group is endangered, with the total number of speakers roughly around 100,000 in 1990.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Pamir language family was sometimes referred to as the Ghalchah languages by western scholars.〔In his 1892 work on the Avestan language Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson, The later Iranian languages, New Persian, Kurdish, Afghan, Ossetish, Baluchi, Ghalach and some minor modern dialects." 〕 The term Ghalchah is no longer used to refer to the Pamir languages or the native speakers of these languages.
One of the most prolific researchers of the Pamir languages was Soviet linguist Ivan Ivanovich Zarubin.
==Shughni–Yazgulami branch==

The Shughni, Sarikoli, and Yazgulyam languages belong to the Shughni–Yazgulami branch. There are about 75,000 speakers of languages in this family in Afghanistan and Tajikistan (including the dialects of Rushani, Bartangi, Oroshor, Khufi, and Shughni). In 1982, there were about 20,000 speakers of Sarikoli in the Sarikol Valley located in the Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County in Xinjiang Province, China. Shughni and Sarikoli are not mutually intelligible. In 1994, there were 4000 speakers of Yazgulyam along the Yazgulyam River in Tajikistan. Yazgulyam is not written.
The Vanji language was spoken in the Vanj river valley the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province in Tajikistan, and was related to Yazgulyam. In the 19th century, the region was forcibly annexed to the Bukharan Emirate and a violent assimilation campaign was undertaken. By the end of the 19th century the Vanji language had disappeared, displaced by Tajik Persian.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Pamir languages」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.