Persian language
Persian | |
---|---|
Template:Rtl-lang ([Fārsi] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) Template:Rtl-lang ([Pārsi] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) | |
Native to | Iran (Persia), Afghanistan, Tajikistan and also in parts of neighboring (e.g., Uzbekistan) and other countries |
Region | Middle East, Central Asia |
Native speakers | 71 million native 110 million total |
Official status | |
Official language in | Iran, Tajikistan, Afghanistan |
Regulated by | Academy of Persian Language and Literature Academy of Sciences of Afghanistan |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | fa |
ISO 639-2 | per (B) fas (T) |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:fas – Persianprs – Eastern Persianpes – Western Persiantgk – Tajikaiq – Aimaqbhh – Bukharicdeh – Dehwaridrw – Darwazihaz – Hazaragijpr – Dzhidiphv – Pahlavani |
Persian, (local name: Fārsī or Pārsī), is an Indo-European language spoken in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan and by minorities in Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Southern Russia, neighboring countries, and elsewhere. It is derived from the language of the ancient Persian people. It is part of the Iranian branch of the Indo-Iranian language family.
Persian and its dialects have official-language status in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. According to CIA World Factbook, based on old data, there are 71 million native speakers of Persian in Iran [1], Afghanistan [2], Tajikistan [3] and Uzbekistan [4] and there are about the same number other peoples who can speak Persian throughout the world. It belongs to the Indo-European language family, and is of the Subject Object Verb type. UNESCO was asked to select Persian as one of its languages in 2006.[5]
Persian is a literary and scientific language of the Islamic world and has influenced neighbouring languages immensly, including the Turkic languages of Central Asia, Caucasus, and Anatolia, as well as the Indo-Aryan languages of Punjab. It had also smaller influence on Arabic and other languages of Mesopotamia.
Prior to British colonization of south Asia, Persian was widely used as a second language in the Indian subcontinent; it took prominence as the language of culture and education in several Muslim courts in the subcontinent throughout the Middle Ages and became the "official language" under the Mughal emperors. Only in 1843 did the British force the subcontinent to begin conducting business in English instead of the traditional Persian.[1] Evidence of its former rank in the region can still be seen by the extent of its influence on Hindi, Bengali, Sindhi language, and Urdu, as well as the popularity that Persian literature still enjoys in the region.
Local names
Persian language is locally known as
- Template:Rtl-lang (transliteration: [Fārsi] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) or Template:Rtl-lang ([Pārsi] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)), local name in Iran, Afghanistan (where it is officially known as Darī) and Tajikistan,
- Tajik, local name in Central Asia.
- Dari, name given to classical Persian poetry and court language, as well as to Persian dialects spoken in Tajikistan, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
However, in many parts of Iran, Farsi is spoken differently through subtle but noticeable dialects. One very popular one is called "Shirazy" which is a dialect of Farsi from the southern city of Shiraz. In "Shirazy" there is more emphasis on certain letters than standard Farsi (vocalized as in from books, poetry, newspapers, etc.)
History
Persian is an Iranian tongue belonging to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European family of languages. Persian is one of the oldest languages of the world.
The known history of the Persian language can be divided into the following three distinct periods;
Old Persian
Old Persian supposedly evolved from Proto-Indo-Iranian on the western wing in the Iranian plateau. The first known written evidence of Persian appears with the rise of the Persian Empire under Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid dynasty in 550 BC. Old Persian was the main official language of the Persian Empire at the time of the Achaemenids and with their rise, its domain extended to Lybia to the west, present-day Ukraine to the north, the Indus river to the east and Yemen to the south, to be used as a lingua franca for over 200 years. The majority of inscriptions in Old Persian were found in Iran, Egypt and present-day Turkey. During this period, Persian was influenced by Aramaic, Elamite, Babylonian, Akkadian, Greek, Sanskrit, Hebrew, etc. Under the Achaemenid, Persian was written in cuneiform with its own distinct script. This period ends with the fall of the Achaemenid.
Middle Persian
Middle Persian can be divided in several periods within two remarkable different eras; the Persian used at the time the Parthian Empire (250 BCE– 226 CE) and the Persian of the Sassanid Empire (226–650 AD). Middle Persian is often referred to as Pahlavi which was written in the script of the same name. Over this period, the morphology of the language was simplified from the complex conjugation and declension system of Old Persian to the almost completely regularized morphology and rigid syntax of Middle Persian. Pahlavi coexisted with several other Iranian languages spoken throughout the Iranian plateau, Central Asia & the Indian sub-continent. These languages included Avestan,Sogdian,Bactrian, Sogdian, Khwarezmian, Saka, and Old Ossetic (Scytho-Sarmatian) Much of the literature in Middle Persian was lost during the Arab invasion.
Modern Persian
Islamic conquest of Persia marks the beginning of the modern history of Persian language and literature. It is known as the golden era of Persian. Through its long way into the modern times, Persian developed a very large number of idioms, expressions and provebs. It's the time that Persian was inriched and became musical, descriptive. It saw world-famous poets and it came to be known as one of the most romantic languages of all times. Persian was for a long time the lingua franca of the western parts of Islamic world and of the Indian subcontinent. It was also the official and cultural language of many Islamic dynasties, inlcuding Samanids, the Mughal Empires, Timurids, Ghaznavid, Seljuq, Safavid, Ottomans, etc. The influence of Persian on other languages can still be witnessed across the Islamic world, and it is still appreciated as a literary and prestigious language among the educated elite, especially in fields of music (for example Qawwali) and art (Persian literature). During this period, Persian was influenced by Arabic and to a lesser extent Turkish, French and English. The language itself has greatly developed during the centuries. Due to technological developments, new words and idioms are created and enter into Persian like any other language. In Tehran, the Academy of Persian Language and Literature evaluates these new words in order to initiate and advise their Persian equivalents.
Nomenclature
Persian, the more widely used name of the language in English, is an Anglicized form derived from Latin *[Persianus] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) < Latin [Persia] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) < Greek [Πέρσις Pérsis] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), a Hellenized form of Old Persian [Parsa] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help). Farsi is the Arabicized form of Parsi, due to a lack of the /p/ phoneme in Standard Arabic. Native Persian speakers typically call it "Fārsi" in modern usage. In English, however, the language continued to be known as "Persian". According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term 'Farsi' seems to have been first used in English in the mid-20th century, but has been condemned by some critics as an affectation.[2] According to Pejman Akbarzadeh, "... many Persians migrating to the West (particularly to the USA) after the 1979 revolution continued to use 'Farsi' to identify their language in English and the word became commonplace in English-speaking countries." [3]
The Academy of Persian Language and Literature has argued in an official pronouncement [6] that the name "Persian" is more appropriate, as it has the longer tradition in the western languages and better expresses the role of the language as a mark of cultural and national continuity. On the other hand, "Farsi" is also encountered frequently in the linguistic literature as a name for the language, used both by Iranian and by foreign authors.[4]
The international language encoding standard ISO 639-1 uses the code "fa", as its coding system is based on the local names. The more detailed draft ISO 639-3 uses the name "Persian" (code "fas") for the larger unit ("macrolanguage") spoken across Iran and Afghanistan, but "Eastern Farsi" and "Western Farsi" for two of its subdivisions (roughly coinciding with the varieties in Afghanistan and those in Iran, respectively) [7]. Ethnologue, in turn, includes "Farsi, Eastern" and "Farsi, Western" as two separate entries and lists "Persian" and "Parsi" as alternative names for each, besides "Irani" for the western and "Dari" for the eastern form ([8], [9]).
A similar terminology, but with even more subdivisions, is also adopted by the "Linguist List", where "Persian" appears as a subgrouping under "Southwest Western Iranian" ([10]). Currently, all International broadcasting radios with services in the Persian language (e.g. VOA, BBC, DW, RFE/RL, etc.) use "Persian Service", in lieu of "Farsi Service." This is also the case for the American Association of Teachers of Persian, The Centre for Promotion of Persian Language and Literature, and many of the leading scholars of Persian language. [11] [12]
Dialects and close languages
Communication is generally mutually intelligible between Iranians, Tajiks, and Persian-speaking Afghans; however, by popular definition:
- Dari is the local name for the eastern dialect of Persian, one of the two official languages of Afghanistan, including Hazaragi — spoken by the Hazara people of central Afghanistan.
- Tajik could also be considered an eastern dialect of Persian, but, unlike Iranian and Afghan Persian, it is written in the Cyrillic script.
Ethnologue offers another classification for dialects of Persian language. According to this source, dialects of this language include the following:[13]
- Western Persian (in Iran)
- Eastern Persian (in Afghanistan)
- Tajik (in Tajikistan)
- Hazaragi (in Afghanistan)
- Aimaq (in Afghanistan)
- Bukharic (in Israel, Uzbekistan)
- Dehwari (in Pakistan)
- Darwazi (in Afghanistan)
- Dzhidi (in Israel)
- Pahlavani (in Afghanistan)
The following are some of the closely related dialects of various Iranian peoples within modern Iran proper:
- Mazandarani, spoken in northern Iran mainly in the province of Mazandaran.
- Gileki (or Gilaki), spoken in the province of Guilan.
- Luri (or Lori), spoken mainly in the southwestern Iranian province of Lorestan and Khuzestan.
- Talysh (or Talishi), spoken in northern Iran and southern parts of the Republic of Azerbaijan.
- Tat (also Tati or Eshtehardi), spoken in parts of the Iranian provinces of East Azarbaijan, Zanjan and Qazvin.
- Dari or Gabri, spoken originally in Yazd and Kerman by the Zoroastrians of Iran. Also called Yazdi by some.
(Note: Lori, Gilaki and Mazandarani are not different languages, but dialects.)
Orthography
The vast majority of modern Persian text is written in a form of the Arabic alphabet. In recent years the Latin alphabet has been used by some for technological or internationalization reasons. Tajik, which is considered by many linguists to be a Persian dialect influenced by Russian, is written with the Cyrillic alphabet in Tajikistan.
Persian alphabet
Modern Persian is normally written using a modified variant of the Arabic alphabet with different pronunciation and fewer letters.
Script adoption
After the conversion of Persia to Islam (see Islamic conquest of Iran), it took approximately 150 years before Persians adopted the Arabic alphabet as a replacement for the older alphabet. Previously, two different alphabets were used for the Persian language (Middle Persian, or Pahlavi, at that time): one was also called Pahlavi and was a modified version of the Aramaic alphabet, and the other was a native Iranian alphabet called Dîndapirak>Din Dabire (literally: religion script).
Additions
The Persian alphabet adds four letters to the Arabic alphabet, due to the fact that four sounds that exist in Persian do not exist in Arabic, as they come from separate language families. Some people call this modified alphabet the Perso-Arabic alphabet. The additional four letters are:
sound | shape | Unicode name |
[p] | پ | Peh |
[tʃ] (ch) | چ | Tcheh |
[ʒ] (zh) | ژ | Zheh |
[g] | گ | Gaf |
Variations
Many Persian words with an Arabic root are spelled differently from the original Arabic word. Alef with hamza below ( إ ) always changes to alef ( ا ); teh marbuta ( ة ) usually, but not always, changes to teh ( ت ) or heh ( ه ); and words using various hamzas get spelled with yet another kind of hamza (so that مسؤول becomes مسئول).
The letters different in shape are:
sound | original Arabic letter | modified Persian letter | name |
[k] | ك | ک | Kaf |
[j] (y) and [iː], or rarely [ɑː] | ي or ى | ی | Yeh |
The diacritical marks used in the Arabic script, a.k.a. harakat, are also used in Persian, although some of them have different pronunciations. For example, an Arabic Damma is pronounced /u/, while in Persian it is pronounced /o/.
The Persian variant also adds the notion of a pseudo-space to the Arabic script, called a Zero-width non-joiner (ZWNJ) by the Unicode Standard. It acts like a space in disconnecting two otherwise-joining adjacent letters, but does not have a visual width.
Word boundaries
In written text, words are usually separated by a space. Compounds and detachable morphemes (i.e., morphemes following a word ending in final form character), however, are written without a space separating them. In other words, the two parts of a compound appear next to each other but the first element in the compound will usually end in a final form character, hence it would be possible to recognize the two parts of the compound. This format is not very consistent, however, and sometimes words can appear without a space between them. If the first word ends in a character that has a final form, then we can easily distinguish the word boundary. But if the first word ends in one of the characters that have only one form, the end of the word is not clear. Although this latter case is usually avoided in written text, it is not rare. Furthermore, a space is sometimes inserted between a word and the morpheme. In such cases, the morpheme needs to be reattached (or the space eliminated) before proceeding to the morphological analysis of the text.
Extensions to other languages
The features of the Persian variant have been taken for other languages, such as Pashto or Urdu, and have sometimes been further extended with new letters or punctuation.
Latin alphabet
The Universal Persian (UniPers / Pârsiye Jahâni) Alphabet is a Latin-based alphabet created over 50 years ago in Iran and popularized by Mohamed Keyvan, who used it in a number of Persian textbooks for foreigners and travellers. It sidesteps the difficulties of the traditional Arabic-based alphabet, with its multiple letter shapes and ambiguous spellings, and fits particularly well in contemporary electronically written media.
The "International Persian Alphabet" (IPA2)[14], commonly called Pársik, is another Latin-based alphabet developed in recent years mainly by A. Moslehi, a comparative linguist, as a project defined and maintained under the authority of Persian Linguistics Association. It is claimed to be the most accurate and regular one among Latin-based Persian alphabets in which many linguistic aspects of Modern Persian have been observed; however, its rules are not as simple as those of UniPers.
Fingilish, or Penglish, is the name given to texts written in Persian using the Basic Latin alphabet. It is most commonly used in chat, emails and SMS applications.
Cyrillic alphabet
Tajik language written in the Cyrillic alphabet was introduced in the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic in the late 1930s, replacing the Latin alphabet that had been used since the Bolshevik revolution. After 1939, materials published in Persian in the Perso-Arabic script were banned from the country. [5]
Phonology
The Persian language has six vowels and twenty-three consonants, including two affricates /ʧ/ (ch) and /ʤ/ (j). Historically, Persian distinguished length: the long vowels /iː/, /uː/, /ɒː/ contrasting with the short vowels /e/, /o/, /æ/ respectively. Modern spoken Persian, however, generally does not make this distinction anymore.
labial |
apico-dentals |
post-alveolars |
velars |
glottals |
|
voiceless stops | p |
t | ʧ |
k | ʔ |
voiced stops | b |
d | ʤ |
g | |
voiceless fricatives | f |
s | ʃ |
x | h |
voiced fricatives | v |
z |
ʒ |
ɣ | |
nasals | m |
n | |||
liquids | l, r |
||||
glides | j |
Note that /ʧ/ and /ʤ/ are affricates, not stops.
Grammar
Suffixes predominate Persian morphology, though there are a small number of prefixes. Verbs can express tense and aspect, and they agree with the subject in person and number. There is no grammatical gender for nouns, nor are pronouns marked for natural gender.
Normal declarative sentences are structured as “(S) (PP) (O) V”. This means sentences can be comprised of optional subjects, prepositional phrases, and objects, followed by a required verb. If the object is specific, then the object is followed by the word rɑ: and precedes prepositional phrases: “(S) (O + “rɑ:”) (PP) V”. [6]
Vocabulary
There are many loanwords in the Persian language, mostly coming from Arabic, English, French, and the Turkic languages.
Persian has likewise influenced the vocabularies of other languages, especially Indo-Iranian languages and Turkic languages. Many Persian words have also found their way into the English language.
See also: List of English words of Persian origin
Trivia
- There are currently 5 presidents in the world who speak Persian as their native language, namely the presidents of Iran, Israel, Afghanistan, Iraq and Tajikistan.
- The word "Farsi" comes from "Parsi", from the fact that Persians (of Pars origins) used to call their language Parsi; as such, the Greek were calling it "Persian". Arabs do not have the letter "p" in their language, thus after Arab invasion of Iran (around 600 a.c.), they started calling the language "Farsi" and the name stuck. Nowadays, even Iranians (and other native speakers) call the language Farsi.
See also
- Academy of Persian Language and Literature
- Dzhidi language
- History of Urdu
- List of common phrases in various languages
- List of Persian poets and authors
- Persian literature
- Middle Persian literature
- Persian mythology
References
- ^ Clawson, Patrick. Eternal Iran, 2004, ISBN 1-4039-6246-6, Palgrave Macmillan, p.6
- ^ Article "Farsi", in Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, ed. John Simpson and Edmund Weiner, Clarendon Press, 1989. ISBN 0-19-861186-2.
- ^ "FARSI" or "PERSIAN"?
- ^ For example: A. Gharib, M. Bahar, B. Fooroozanfar, J. Homaii, and R. Yasami. Farsi Grammar. Jahane Danesh, 2nd edition, 2001.
- ^ Perry, J. R. (2005). A Tajik Persian Reference Grammar. Boston: Brill. p. 34. ISBN 90-04-14323-8.
- ^ Mahootian, Shahrzad (1997). Persian. London: Routledge. p. 6. ISBN 0-415-02311-4.
Further reading
External links
- AriaDic Persian / English Dictionary with pronunciation
- New Persian Project: Persian
- UCLA Language Materials Project: Persian
- FarsiNet - Information about origin of Persian language, etc.
- Persian to English and English to Persian Dictionary
- Learn Persian
- Easypersian.com
- Persian Linguistics Association
- Persian Fonts