The Kurdish language is an Indo-Iranian language spoken in the region loosely called Kurdistan, including Kurdish populations in parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey.Geographic distribution of Kurdish and other Iranic languages Kurdish is an official language in Iraq while it is banned in Syria. Before August 2002, the Turkish government placed severe restrictions on the use of Kurdish, prohibiting the language in education and broadcast media.Special Focus Cases: Leyla Zana, Prisoner of Conscience In Iran, though it is used in the local media and newspapers, only a few schools are permitted to teach the language. The Iranian government allows very limited higher education in Kurdish, and therefore, many Kurds have left for Iraq where they can study in their native language.Neighboring Kurds Travel to Study in Iraq
The Kurdish language belongs to the western sub-group of the Iranian languages which belong to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European languages family. The most closely related languages to Kurdish are Balochi, Gilaki and Talysh, all of which belong to the north-western branch of Iranian languages. Persian which belongs to the south-western branch, is also considered a related language.
In the beginning of the 20th century those countries who control over Kurdistan refused to accept Kurdish as an official language and made restrictions on its use. Today while in Iraq Kurdish is an official language there are restrictions in Turkey although a limited usage is allowed but Syria still opposes to the use of Kurdish in the country.
In March 2006, Turkey allowed private television channels to begin airing Kurdish language programs. However, the Turkish government said that they must steer clear of showing children's cartoons, educational programs that teach the Kurdish language, and can only broadcast for 45 minutes a day or four hours a week. The programs must carry Turkish subtitles.Turkey to get Kurdish television
In the above example the word pênûs(-eke) (the) pen which is the object of the sentence agrees with the subject in case and becomes pênûseke-yan, and the verb hêna (brought) agrees with the indirect object of the sentence in case and becomes hêna-yn.
In addition to these, Kurdish uses various adpositions i.e. both prepositions and postpositions marking at the same time on a head noun. None of its neighbouring languages do it.
Other linguists classify the Kurdish language as the Northern Kurdish group of dialects also called Kurmanji and Badînî, the Central Kurdish group of dialects also called Sorani, and the Southern Kurdish group of dialects.
The detailed classification of Kurdish dialects is problematic. There is no widely-accepted appellative system for the various Kurdish dialects; not only in Western scholarly opinion, but even among the Kurds themselves. This often prompts arguments if these four different dialects are a language on their own or not.
A proposed system for the classification of the dialects is as follows *:
| Kurdish | Avestan | Persian | Sanskrit | Greek | English | German | Latin | Lithuanian | Russian | PIE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ez "I" | azəm | aham | egō | I (< OE ić) | ich | ego | aš | ja (OCS azŭ) | ||
| jin "woman" | janay- "woman" | zan | janay- | gynē | queen | (OHG quena) | (OPruss. genna) | žená | ||
| mezin "great" | maz-, mazant | mah(ī)-/mahānt- | megas | much (< OE mićil, myćil) | (OHG mihhil) | magnus | "big, great" * | |||
| mêzer "headband/turban" (from Greek?, cf. p38) | miθra- "contract, Mithra" | mihr "sun" (< "Mithra") | mitra "contract, Mitra" | mitra "headband" (from Iranian?) | (mitre "bishop's tall hat" - from Greek[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=Mitra&searchmode=none) | (Mitra - from Greek) | (mitra - from Greek) | "to tie" | ||
| pez "sheep" | pasu- "sheep, goats" | paśu "animal" | fee (< OE feoh "cattle") | Vieh "cattle" | pecus "cattle" | pekus "ox" | "sheep"*,* | |||
| çiya "mountain" | chakād "summit" | kakúd-, kakúbh- "peak/summit" | cacūmen | "top"* | ||||||
| zîndu "alive" jiyan "to live" | jī-/gay- | zende "alive", zîstan "to live" | jīvati | bios "life", zōō "live" | quick | quick "bright" | vīvus "alive", vīvō "live", vīta "life" | gývas | živój | |
| mang "moon" | māh- | māh | mās- | mēn "month" | moon, month | Mond, Monat | mēnsis "month" | mėnuo/mėnesis | mésjac | |
| mirdu "dead", mirdin "to die" | mar-, məša- | morda "dead", mordan "to die" | marati, mrta- | brotos "mortal", ambrosios "immortal" | murder | Mord "murder" | morior "die", mors "death" | mirti "to die" | umerét’"to die", mërtvyj "tot" | |
| ser "head" | sarah- | sar | śiras- | ker"horn", kara "head", krā | dial. harns "brain" | *hir*" target="_blank" >"brain" | cereb[rum "brain" | |||
| sed "hundred" | satəm | sad | śatam | hund*" target="_blank" > | centum | šimt[as | sto | |||
| *" target="_blank" >"I know" zan | zan- | *dān*" target="_blank" >"I know", dān | jān*" target="_blank" > | *" target="_blank" > | know | kennen | nō*gn*" target="_blank" > | žinžin*" target="_blank" >"to know" | znázn[at’" target="_blank" >*' "to know" |
| Urartian | Kurdish | English |
|---|---|---|
| ale | ale | he says |
| aba | awat | desire |
| ada | idi | again |
| patari | bajar | city |
| bid-u | bid-ewe | give back |
| ibirani | pirani | whole |
| par-u | par-inewe | cross over |
| kuri | qul | foot |
| şia | çún | go |
| şal-i | sal | year |
| sue | zé | lake |
| huş-u | hawiş-tin | throw |
The Kurdish language uses three different writing systems. In Iran and Iraq is written using a modified version of the Arabic alphabet (and more recently sometimes with Latin Alphabet in Iraqi Kurdistan). In Turkey and Syria, it is written using the Latin alphabet. (As an example, see the following online news portal published in Iraqi Kurdistan Also see the VOA News site in Kurdish [http://www.voanews.com/kurdi/). Kurdish in the former USSR uses a modified Cyrillic alphabet. There is also a proposal for a unified international recognised Kurdish alphabet based on ISO-8859-1.The Kurdish Unified Alphabet
| Bilabial | Labiodental | Apical | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stops | ||||||||
| Fricatives | ||||||||
| Affricates | ||||||||
| Nasals | ||||||||
| Laterals | ||||||||
| Flaps | ||||||||
| Trills | ||||||||
| Approximants |
| front | central | back | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| short | long | short | long | short | long | |
| close | ||||||
| mid | ||||||
| open | ||||||
The vowel pairs and , and , and and contrast in length and not quality. This distinction shows up in the writing system; long vowels have a circumflex ( ^ ) and short vowels do not. As it is with most languages, Kurdish short vowels are not represented at all in the Arabic script..
Kurdish language | Languages of Iran | Languages of Iraq | Languages of Turkey
Kurdisch | لغة كردية | Kurd | Kurdisk (sprog) | Kurdische Sprachen | Κουρδική γλώσσα | Idioma kurdo | Kurda lingvo | زبان کردی | Kurde | 쿠르드어 | Kurda linguo | Bahasa Kurdi | Lingua curda | כורדית | Zimanê kurdî | Kurd nyelv | Koerdisch | クルド語 | Kurdisk språk | Kurd | Język kurdyjski | Língua curda | Курдский язык | Kurdiska | Kürt dilleri | 库尔德语
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