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Encyclopedia > Tadjik language
This article or section should include material from Tajiki Persian

Tajik or Tadjik (natively Тоҷикӣ, Tojikí, تاجیکی) is a descendant of the Persian language spoken in Central Asia. It is an Indo-European language, more specifically part of the Iranian language group. Speakers of Tajik live mostly in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Afghanistan, though approximately 30,000 live near the Tajikistan border in China. It is the official language of Tajikistan.


Tajik is an offspring of the Persian language, so close that some consider it a dialect of Persian. Historically, it was considered the local dialect of Persian spoken by the Tajik ethnic group in Central Asia; when the Soviet Union imposed the use of the Latin script in 1928, and later the Cyrillic script, it came to be considered a separate language in Tajikistan, partly for political reasons. (In Afghanistan, Tajiks continued to use the Arabic script.) The language has diverged somewhat from Persian as spoken in Afghanistan and Iran, because of political borders and the influence of Russian; however, a transcribed Tajik text can in general easily be read and understood by an Afghan or Iranian Persian speaker, and vice versa. The common origin of the two languages is underscored by the Tajiks' claim to such famous writers as Omar Khayyam, Firdausi, and Ali Shir Navai.


The most important Tajik-speaking cities of Central Asia, namely Samarkand and Bukhara, are in present-day Uzbekistan. There have been claims that the speakers of the language have been oppressed by the Uzbekistan's government, and were forced to speak in Uzbek in public, or otherwise would be fined.


In China, Tajik has no official written form. Most Chinese "Tajik" speakers actually speak the Sariqul (or Sariköli) language, which, though called "Tajik", is no more closely related to Tajik than the other Pamir languages, and use Uyghur and Chinese to communicate with people of other nationalities in the area.


See also

External links

Wikipedia articles written in this language are located at the
Tajik language Wikipedia

  Results from FactBites:
 
Kids.Net.Au - Encyclopedia > Indian language (947 words)
Linguists think of Hindi and Urdu as the same language, the difference being that Hindi is written in Devanagari script and draws vocabulary from Sanskrit, while Urdu is written in Arabic script and draws on Persian and Arabic.
Urdu writing is quite complex due to the fact that the language derives its sources from Persian and Arabic as well as Hindustani, the dialect of the Gangetic plains, formalised in modern Hindi.
It is believed that Urdu is closest to Tadjik[?], the language of a province on the outer periphery of the Persian Empire.
Discovery :: Archive :: Voyage. ABC of Tadjikistan (600 words)
Tadjik is the name used in Tadjikistan and Dari is the Afghan name for Farsi, the Arabic word for Parsi, Persian, used in the West, as the letter P is not known in the Arabic language.
Tadjik and Dari are part of the Indoeuropean languages with their sub groups Indoiranian and finally western Indoiranian.
Tadjik is devided in 4 groups, the northern dialect also spoken in southern Ouzbekistan and Kyrghyzstan, the central dialect of Matcha, Aini, Gissar and Varzob, the southern version of Badakhshan for instance and the south east dialect of Pianj and Darvaz.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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