首页 | 主题 | 图库 | 问答 | 文摘 | 原创 | 百科

历史 | 地理 | 人物 | 艺术 | 体育 | 科学 | 音乐 | 电影 | 信息技术 | 世界遗产

 开放、中立,源自维基百科

Personal tools

Persian language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Persian
فارسی, Fārsi 
Fārsi in Perso-Arabic script (Nasta`liq style): Image:Farsi.svg 
Pronunciation: [fɒrˈsi]
Spoken in: Iran, Tajikistan (Tajik), Uzbekistan,Afghanistan (Dari), and Bahrain. Also in various Iranian, Afghanistani, Uzbekistani, and Tajikistani diaspora, specifically , USA, Russia, Germany, Turkmenistan, France, Sweden, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Pakistan and Turkey
Region: Middle East, Central Asia
Total speakers: ca. 72 million native,[1] ca. 62 million second language[citation needed], 134 million total 
Ranking: ca. 12th (native speakers)
Language family: Indo-European
 Indo-Iranian
  Iranian
   Western Iranian
    Southwestern Iranian
     Persian 
Official status
Official language in: Flag of Iran Iran
Flag of Afghanistan Afghanistan
Flag of Turkmenistan Turkmenistan[1]
Flag of Tajikistan Tajikistan[1]
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 — Persian
prs — Eastern Persian
pes — Western Persian
tgk — Tajik
aiq — Aimaq
bhh — Bukharic
deh — Dehwari
drw — Darwazi
haz — Hazaragi
jpr — Dzhidi
phv — Pahlavani 

Areas with Persian-speakers as mother tongue language

Persian (local names: فارسی [fɒrˈsi], Fārsi or پارسی [pɒrˈsi], Pārsi; see Nomenclature) is an Indo-European language spoken in Iran (Persia), Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and the Persian Gulf states. It is derived from the language of the ancient Persian people.

Persian and its varieties have official-language status in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. According to CIA World Factbook, based on old data, there are approximately 64 million native speakers of Persian in Iran,[2] Afghanistan,[3] Tajikistan[4] and Uzbekistan[5] and about the same number of people in other parts of the world speak Persian. UNESCO was asked to select Persian as one of its languages in 2006.[6]

Persian has been a medium for literary and scientific contributions to the Islamic world as well as the Western. It has had an influence on certain neighbouring languages, particularly the Turkic languages of Central Asia, Caucasus, and Anatolia. It has had a lesser influence on Arabic and other languages of Mesopotamia.

For five centuries prior to the British colonization, 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 South Asia and became the "official language" under the Mughal emperors. Only in 1843 did the subcontinent begin conducting business in English.[7] Evidence of Persian's historical influence in the region can be seen in the extent of its influence on the languages of Hindustani, and other languages of the Indian subcontinent, as well as the popularity that Persian literature still enjoys in that region. Especially, Urdu is a result of predominatly Persian linguistics combining other foreign languages like Arabic, Turkish, and Hindi, along with other regional languages of South Asia and was largely used in Muslim areas of Indian Mughal Empire.

Contents

Classification

Persian belongs to the Western group of the Iranian languages branch of the Indo-European language family, and is of the Subject Object Verb type. Contrary to common belief, it is not a Semitic language. The Western Indo-Iranian group contains other related languages such as Kurdish, Balochi and Zazaish. The language is in the Southwestern Indo-Iranian group, along with the Tat and Luri languages.[8]

Image:Persianspeakingworld.png
Green denotes official language status; orange denotes minority language.

Local names

The Persian language is locally known as

  • فارسی‎ (transliteration: Fārsi) or پارسی‎ (Pārsi), 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 Afghanistan, Tajikistan.

Nomenclature

Persian, the more widely used name of the language in English, is an Anglicized form derived from Latin *Persianus < Latin Persia < Greek Πέρσις Pérsis, a Hellenized form of Old Persian Parsa. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term Persian seems to have been first used in English in the mid-16th century.[9] Native Persian speakers call it "Fārsi" (local name) or Parsi. Farsi is the arabicized form of Parsi, due to a lack of the /p/ phoneme in Standard Arabic.

In English this language is historically known as "Persian". Many Persians migrating to the West (particularly to the USA) after the 1979 revolution continued to use 'Farsi' to identify their language in English. The word became commonplace in English-speaking countries."[10] "Farsi" is encountered frequently in the linguistic literature as a name for the language, used both by Iranian and by foreign authors,[11] and is preferred by some.[12] However, The Academy of Persian Language and Literature has declared in an official pronouncement[13] 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.

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).[14] 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.[15][16]

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".[17] Currently, VOA, BBC, DW, and RFE/RL use "Persian Service", in lieu of "Farsi Service". RFE/RL also includes a Tajik service, and Afghan (Dari) 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.[18]

See also: exonym and endonym

Dialects and close languages


Persian language

History
Dialects

Writing systems

There are three modern varieties for the standard Persian:

Languages
AD Links