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Dari (Persian: دری Darī, pronounced [dæˈɾi]) or Dari Persian (Persian: فارسی دری - Fārsīy e Darī, [fɒːɾsije dæˈɾi]), also known as Eastern Persian, is a historical name for the Persian language and, in contemporary usage refers to the dialects of the Persian language that are spoken in Afghanistan.[1][2][3] It is the term officially recognized and promoted by the Afghan government for the language.[1] As defined in the Constitution of Afghanistan, Dari is an official language of Afghanistan next to Pashto. Dari also serves as the lingua franca in Afghanistan.[4]
[edit] Origin of the word "Dari"There are different opinions about the origin of the word Dari. The majority of scholars believe that Dari refers to the Persian word darbār (دربار), meaning "Court", as it was the formal language of the Sassanids.[1] This opinion is supported by medieval sources and early Islamic historians.[5] [edit] Geographical distributionIn Afghanistan Dari Persian ("Fārsi e Dari") is also simply called Persian ("Fārsi"). It is not to be confused with Dari or Gabri of Iran, a language of the Central Iran sub-group, spoken in some Zoroastrian communities.[6][7] Iranian languages have been and are still widely used in Central Asia both by native speakers and as trade languages. Whereas in the past East Iranian languages, such as Bactrian, Sogdian and Khotanese, and West Iranian languages, notably Parthian and Middle Persian were prominent, New Persian has supplanted most of these languages. Only in the Pamir Mountains there are still pockets of speakers of East Iranian languages left, such as Shughni, Sarikoli, Yazgulami, and Sanglechi-Ishkashmi, thanks to their relative isolation. Dari Persian is considered to be a more archaic form of (New) Persian. It is the major language of Afghanistan, one of the two official languages (next to Pashto). In practice though it serves as the de facto lingua franca among the various, different ethno-linguistic groups. Dari Persian dominates in the northern and western parts, and the capital, Kabul, in the east. Dari Persian has contributed to the majority of Persian borrowings in South Asian languages, such as Hindi-Urdu, Panjabi, Bengali, etc., as it was the administrative,official and cultural language of the Persocentric Mughal Empire and served as the lingua franca throughout the Indian subcontinent for centuries. The sizeable Persian component of the Anglo-Indian loan words in English therefore reflects Dari pronunciation, for instance dopiaza (= Iranian Persian do-piyāzeh "(having) two onions"), gymkhana (-khana = Ir. Pers. khāneh "house"), pyjama (= Ir. Pers. pey-jāmeh "leg/foot garment"[8], Chicken tikka (tikka = Ir. Pers. tekkeh "piece, chunk"). [edit] Differences between Iranian and Afghan Persian[edit] PhonologyThe differences in pronunciation of Iranian and Afghan Persian can be considerable, on par with Scottish and Cockney English, although, naturally, educated speakers have generally no difficulty understanding each other (except in the use of certain lexical items or idiomatic expressions). The principal differences between standard Iranian Persian, based on the dialect of the capital Tehran, and Afghan Dari, as based on the Kabul dialect, are:
[edit] Morphology
[edit] SyntaxOn the other hand, the syntax of Dari Persian does not differ greatly from Iranian Persian. One of the major grammatical differences is expressing the continuous tense. In Iranian Persian, the auxiliary verb “to have” (داشتن [dāštan]) is placed before the main finite verb (with prefix "mī-") to indicate a continuous action. In Dari, on the other hand, a periphrastic construction with the expression "dar hāl-i" (at the moment of) is used instead: the main verb appears in the infinitive. A sentence like "I am going" would be thus expressed as "man dāram mīr(av)am" in Iran, whereas in Afghanistan this would be "man dar hāl-i raftan hastam" ("hastam" is a copula form, viz. the 1st person singular present of the verb "būdan" 'to be').
[edit] Vocabulary
[edit] Cultural influences from Iran on DariThe cultural dominance of Iran (especially in the media and education) ensures that the specific features of Iranian Persian are also understood by many Dari speakers in Afghanistan. This is also (to a point) vice versa. The Persian variant of Afghanistan, which also shows some influence by speakers of Pashto on the colloquial level, usually able to be mutually understood by the Persian speakers of Iran.
[edit] HistoryThe history of Dari is closely related to the birth and rise of New Persian as a literary language after the arrival of Islam. See the entry Persian language. [edit] Political views on the languageSome people do not consider the Persian spoken in Afghanistan to be a separate dialect.[citation needed] They consider it to be just Persian. Dari is used by certain scholars in Tajikistan and Iran, including Mahmoud Dowlatabadi, to refer to the Persian language.[citation needed] It is also believed by some that Dari Persian should not be called Afghanistani Persian, because it already existed centuries before the creation of Afghanistan, or the use of the word Afghanistani. Linguists prefer the terms Western Persian (Farsi) for the spoken Persian in Tehran, and Eastern Persian (Dari) for the Persian spoken in eastern Iran and Afghanistan. The language name of Afghanistan was officially changed from Farsi to Dari due to political reasons in 1964.[10][11] [edit] See also[edit] Further reading
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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