Rushani dialect
Rushani | |
---|---|
rixū̊n ziv | |
Native to | Afghanistan, Tajikistan |
Native speakers
|
unknown (18,000 cited 1990)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | rush1239 [2] |
Rushani is a dialect of Shughnani (also referred to as Shughni), one of the Pamir languages spoken in Afghanistan and Tajikistan.
The Roshan area is located in the northern part of the Shighnan District, in the Badakhshan Province of Afghanistan.[what about Tajikistan?] Roshan consists of six villages, five of which are located on the bank of the river Panj, which meets[clarification needed] at the border of Tajikistan.[3] Most Rushani speakers belong to the Ismaili branch of Shi'a Islam.[3]
Language use
Rushani, like other Shugni dialects, is only used in unofficial settings. All of the children in the community learn Rushani as their first language and rely heavily on it until they enroll in school. It is only then that they learn the official language of the country.[3] Adult speakers are all bi- or tri-lingual in Tajik and Russian. The language is not written; Rushani speakers write in Tajik.[4]
Verbs
Rushani is unusual in having a transitive case – a so-called double-oblique clause structure – in the past tense. That is, in the past tense,[5] the agent and object of a transitive verb are both marked, while the subject of an intransitive verb is not. In the present tense, the object of the transitive verb is marked, the other two roles are not – that is, a typical nominative–accusative alignment.[6] See transitive case for examples.
References
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External links
- Rushani [1] at the Endangered Languages Project
Literature
- Zarubin, I.I.. Bartangskie i rushanskie teksty i slovar. Moskva : Izd-vo Akademii nauk SSSR, 1937.
- Payne, John, "Pamir languages" in Compendium Linguarum Iranicarum, ed. Schmitt (1989), 417–444.
- Payne, John. "The decay of ergativity in Pamir languages." Lingua 51:147-186.
- ↑ Shughni at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Muller, K. 2010: Language in Community-Oriented and Contact-Oriented Domains: The Case of the Shughni of Tajakistan. SIL International.
- ↑ Dodykhudoeva, L. 2007: Revitalization of minority languages: comparative dictionary of key cultural terms in the languages and dialects of the Shugni-Rushani group. London: SOAS.
- ↑ or perhaps perfective aspect
- ↑ J.R. Payne, 'Language Universals and Language Types', in Collinge, ed. 1990. An Encyclopedia of Language. Routledge. From Payne, 1980.
- Pages with reference errors
- Language articles with old speaker data
- Dialects of languages with ISO 639-3 code
- Languages without ISO 639-3 code but with Glottolog code
- Wikipedia articles needing clarification from June 2015
- Pamir languages
- Southeastern Iranian languages
- Languages of Tajikistan
- Endangered languages of Iran
- Endangered languages of Tajikistan
- Language articles citing Ethnologue 18