Kurdish languages

Kurdish
Kurdî / کوردی
Native to Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia
Region Kurdistan, Anatolia, Khorasan
Ethnicity Kurds
Native speakers
C. 20–30 million (2000–2010 est.)[1]
Early forms
Dialects
Northern Kurdish (Kurmanji)
Southern Kurdish (Pehlewani)
In use:
Sorani alphabet (Perso-Arabic script; used mostly in Iraq and Iran)
Hawar alphabet (Latin script; used mostly in Turkey and Syria)
Historical:
Armenian alphabet (former Soviet Armenia)
Cyrillic alphabet (former Soviet Union)
Official status
Official language in
 Iraq ( Kurdistan)
Language codes
ISO 639-1 ku
ISO 639-2 kur
ISO 639-3 kurinclusive code
Individual codes:
ckb  Central Kurdish
kmr  Northern Kurdish
sdh  Southern Kurdish
Glottolog kurd1259[2]
Linguasphere 58-AAA-a (North Kurdish incl. Kurmanji & Kurmanjiki) + 58-AAA-b (Central Kurdish incl. Dimli/Zaza & Gurani) + 58-AAA-c (South Kurdish incl. Kurdi)

Map of Kurdish-speaking areas of the Middle East

Geographic distribution of Kurdish and other Iranian languages spoken by Kurds

  Zaza
  Gorani
  mixed areas

Kurdish (کوردی, Kurdî) is a continuum of Northwestern Iranian languages spoken by the Kurds in Western Asia. Kurdish forms three dialect groups known as Northern Kurdish (Kurmanji), Central Kurdish (Sorani), and Southern Kurdish (Pehlewani). A separate group of languages, Zaza-Gorani, is also spoken by several million Kurds, but is linguistically not Kurdish.[3][4][5][6] Recent (as of 2009) studies estimate between 20 and 30 million native speakers of Kurdish in total.[7] The majority of the Kurds speak Kurmanji.[8][9]

The literary output in Kurdish was mostly confined to poetry until the early 20th century, when more general literature began to be developed. Today, there are two principal written Kurdish dialects, namely Kurmanji in the northern parts of the geographical region of Kurdistan, and Sorani further east and south. The standard Sorani form of Central Kurdish is, along with Arabic, one of the two official languages of Iraq and is in political documents simply referred to as Kurdish.[10][11]

Classification and origin

The Kurdish languages belong to the Iranian branch of the Indo-European family. They are generally classified as Northwestern Iranian languages, or by some scholars as intermediate between Northwestern and Southwestern Iranian.[12] Martin van Bruinessen notes that "Kurdish has a strong south-western Iranian element", whereas "Zaza and Gurani [...] do belong to the north-west Iranian group".[13]

Ludwig Paul concludes that Kurdish seems to be a Northwestern Iranian language in origin,[14] but acknowledges that it shares many traits with Southwestern Iranian languages like Persian, apparently due to longstanding and intense historical contacts.

Windfuhr identified Kurdish dialects as Parthian, albeit with a Median substratum.[15]

The present state of knowledge about Kurdish allows, at least roughly, drawing the approximate borders of the areas where the main ethnic core of the speakers of the contemporary Kurdish dialects was formed. The most argued hypothesis on the localisation of the ethnic territory of the Kurds remains D.N. Mackenzie's theory, proposed in the early 1960s (Mackenzie 1961). Developing the ideas of P. Tedesco (1921: 255) and regarding the common phonetic isoglosses shared by Kurdish, Persian, and Baluchi, Mackenzie concluded that the speakers of these three languages may once have been in closer contact.

He has tried to reconstruct the alleged Persian-Kurdish-Baluchi linguistic unity presumably in the central parts of Iran. According to Mackenzie's theory, the Persians (or Proto-Persians) occupied the province of Fars in the southwest (proceeding from the assumption that the Achaemenids spoke Persian), the Baluchis (Proto-Baluchis) inhabited the central areas of Western Iran, and the Kurds (Proto-Kurds), in the wording of G. Windfuhr (1975: 459), lived either in northwestern Luristan or in the province of Isfahan.[16]

Subdivisions

Kurdish is divided into three groups, where dialects from different groups are not mutually intelligible without acquired bilingualism.[17][18]

In historical evolution terms, Kurmanji is less modified than Sorani and Pehlewani in both phonetic and morphological structure. The Sorani group has been influenced by among other things its closer cultural proximity to the other languages spoken by Kurds in the region including the Gorani language in parts of Iranian Kurdistan and Iraqi Kurdistan.[19][22] The Kermanshahi group has been influenced by among other things its closer cultural proximity to Persian.[21]

Philip G. Kreyenbroek, an expert writing in 1992, says:[19]

Since 1932 most Kurds have used the Roman script to write Kurmanji.... Sorani is normally written in an adapted form of the Arabic script.... Reasons for describing Kurmanji and Sorani as 'dialects' of one language are their common origin and the fact that this usage reflects the sense of ethnic identity and unity among the Kurds. From a linguistic or at least a grammatical point of view, however, Kurmanji and Sorani differ as much from each other as English and German, and it would seem appropriate to refer to them as languages. For example, Sorani has neither gender nor case-endings, whereas Kurmanji has both.... Differences in vocabulary and pronunciation are not as great as between German and English, but they are still considerable.

According to Encyclopaedia of Islam, although Kurdish is not a unified language, its many dialects are interrelated and at the same time distinguishable from other Western Iranian languages. The same source classifies different Kurdish dialects as two main groups, northern and central.[22] The reality is that the average Kurmanji speaker does not find it easy to communicate with the inhabitants of Suleymania or Halabja.[18]

Some linguistic scholars assert that the term "Kurdish" has been applied extrinsically in describing the language the Kurds speak, whereas ethnic Kurds have used the word term to simply describe their ethnic or national identity and refer to their language as Kurmanji, Sorani, Hewrami, Kermanshahi, Kalhori or whatever other dialect or language they speak. Some historians have noted that it is only recently that the Kurds who speak the Sorani dialect have begun referring to their language as Kurdî, in addition to their identity, which is translated to simply mean Kurdish.[23]

Zazaki and Gorani

Main articles: Zaza language and Gorani language

The Zaza–Gorani languages, spoken by communities in the wider area who identify as ethnic Kurds, are not linguistically classified as Kurdish.[3][4][5][6] They are classified as adjunct to Kurdish within the Northwestern Iranian languages, although authorities differ in the details. Windfuhr 2009 groups Kurdish with Zaza Gorani within a "Northwestern I" group, while Glottolog based on Encyclopedia Iranica prefers an areal grouping of "Central dialects" (or "Kermanic") within Northwest Iranic, with Kurdish but not Zaza-Gorani grouped with "Kermanic". [24]

Gorani appears to be distinct from Kurmanji and Sorani, yet shares vocabulary with both of them and some grammatical similarities with Sorani.[25] Hewrami, a dialect of Gorani, was an important literary language since the fourteenth century but was replaced by Sorani in the twentieth.[26]

European scholars have maintained that Gorani is separate from Kurdish and that Kurdish is synonymous with the Kurmanji-language group, whereas ethnic Kurds maintain that Kurdish encompasses any of the unique languages or dialects spoken by Kurds that are not spoken by neighboring ethnic groups.[27]

Gorani is often classified as part of the Zaza–Gorani branch of Indo-Iranian languages.[28] The Zaza language, spoken in the northernmost parts of Kurdistan differs both grammatically and in vocabulary and is generally not understandable by Gorani speakers but it is considered related to Gorani. Almost all Zaza-speaking communities,[29] as well as speakers of another closely related language spoken in parts of Iraqi Kurdistan called Shabaki, identify themselves as ethnic Kurds.[3][30][31][32][33][34]

Geoffrey Haig and Ergin Öpengin in their recent study suggest grouping the Kurdish languages into Northern Kurdish, Central Kurdish, Southern Kurdish, Zaza, and Gorani, and avoid the subgrouping Zaza–Gorani.

History

During his stay in Damascus, historian Ibn Wahshiyya came across two books on agriculture written in Kurdish, one on the culture of the vine and the palm tree, and the other on water and the means of finding it out in unknown ground. He translated both from Kurdish into Arabic in the early 9th century AD.[35]

Among the earliest Kurdish religious texts is the Yazidi Black Book, the sacred book of Yazidi faith. It is considered to have been authored sometime in the 13th century AD by Hassan bin Adi (b. 1195 AD), the great-grandnephew of Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir (d. 1162), the founder of the faith. It contains the Yazidi account of the creation of the world, the origin of man, the story of Adam and Eve and the major prohibitions of the faith.[36] From the 15th to 17th centuries, classical Kurdish poets and writers developed a literary language. The most notable classical Kurdish poets from this period were Ali Hariri, Ahmad Khani, Malaye Jaziri and Faqi Tayran.

The Italian priest Maurizio Garzoni published the first Kurdish grammar titled Grammatica e Vocabolario della Lingua Kurda in Rome in 1787 after eighteen years of missionary work among the Kurds of Amadiya.[37] This work is very important in Kurdish history as it is the first acknowledgment of the widespread use of a distinctive Kurdish language. Garzoni was given the title Father of Kurdology by later scholars.[38] The Kurdish language was banned in a large portion of Kurdistan for some time. After the 1980 Turkish coup d'état until 1991 the use of the Kurdish language was illegal in Turkey.[39]

Current status

Road signs near Diyarbakır showing the place names in Turkish and Kurdish

Today, Central Kurdish is an official language in Iraq. In Syria, on the other hand, publishing materials in Kurdish is forbidden,[40] though this prohibition is not enforced anymore due to the civil war.[41]

Before August 2002, the Turkish government placed severe restrictions on the use of Kurdish, prohibiting the language in education and broadcast media.[42][43] The Kurdish alphabet is not recognized in Turkey, and the use of Kurdish names containing the letters X, W, and Q, which do not exist in the Turkish alphabet, is not allowed.[44] In 2012, Kurdish-language lessons became an elective subject in public schools. Previously, Kurdish education had only been possible in private institutions.[45]

In Iran, though it is used in some local media and newspapers, it is not used in public schools.[46][47] In 2005, 80 Iranian Kurds took part in an experiment and gained scholarships to study in Kurdish in Iraqi Kurdistan.[48]

In March 2006, Turkey allowed private television channels to begin airing programming in Kurdish. However, the Turkish government said that they must avoid showing children's cartoons, or educational programs that teach Kurdish, and could broadcast only for 45 minutes a day or four hours a week.[49] However, most of these restrictions on private Kurdish television channels were relaxed in September 2009.[50]

In 2010, Kurdish municipalities in the southeast decided to begin printing water bills, marriage certificates and construction and road signs, as well as emergency, social and cultural notices in Kurdish alongside Turkish. Friday sermons by Imams began to be delivered in the language, and Esnaf provided Kurdish price tags.[51]

The state-run Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT) started its 24-hour Kurdish television station on 1 January 2009 with the motto "we live under the same sky".[52] The Turkish Prime Minister sent a video message in Kurdish to the opening ceremony, which was attended by Minister of Culture and other state officials. The channel uses the X, W, and Q letters during broadcasting.

In Kyrgyzstan, 96.4% of the Kurdish population speak Kurdish as their native language.[53] In Kazakhstan, the corresponding percentage is 88.7%.[54]

Phonology

According to the Kurdish Academy of Language, Kurdish has the following phonemes:

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-
dental
Apical Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyn-
geal
Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive p 3   b t 3   d k 2,3   ɡ 2 q ʔ
Affricate t͡ʃ 3   d͡ʒ
Fricative f   v s   z ʃ   ʒ x   ɣ ħ   ʕ h
Lateral l   k 1
Flap ɾ
Trill r
Approximant ʋ j

Vowels

According to the Kurdish Academy of Language, vowel phonemes of Kurdish are as follows:[58][59]

Front Central Back
Close
Near-close j
Close-mid o
Open-mid ɛ
Open

As in most modern Iranian languages, Kurdish vowels contrast in quality; they often carry a secondary length distinction that does not affect syllabic weight.[60] This distinction appears in the writing systems developed for Kurdish. The four "short" vowels are /ɛ/, /ɪ/, /o/, and /u/. The five long vowels are //, //, //, // and /ʉː/.[58] Variations occur, e.g. in Southern Kurdish where long vowel /ɑː/ is used instead of // and short vowel /ɡ/ is used instead of /ɛ/.

Historical phonology

OPMP PersianKurdishParthianAvestanProto-Iranian
θhhsss
dddzzz
jzzžžj*j, *Vč
czz ž ž c
-š--š--š--h-/nil-š--š-*-š-
x-x-x-k-x-x-*x-
w-w-b-b-w-w-*w-
y-j-j-j-y-y-*y-
b, d, g w, y, (')w, y, (/nil)w, y, (nil)β, ð, ɣ b, d, g *b, *d, *g
p, t, kb, d, g, b, d, g w, h, y, (/nil) β, ð, ɣp, t, k *p, *t, *k
Vm-m-m-v (-w)-m-m-*m
fr-fr- (hr-)for- etc. fr-fr- fr-*fr-
çsss?hrθr ('s'?)*θr
θwhh h? or w/v?fθw*θw
duv-d-d-d-b-duu-*dw-
s/zs/zs/zsp?/zw? sp/zwsp/zw *św/ *źw
(h)uv-xw-x(w)-x(w)-wx-xv-, huu-*hw-
rdl, rl unclear (maybe: l, ł, r)rð & rzrd & rz*rd & *rź
ndnd/nnndnndnd*nd
šnšnšnžnznsn*śn
Všm, Vhm-šm, -hm -šm, -xm -v (-w)-šm, -hm-šm, -hm *šm?
ftftft (w)t, (ft?)ftft*ft
xtxtxttxtxt*xt
pasāpaspaspāšpašpas-ča*pas-ča
šiyav-šaw-šaw- č- šaw- šiiu- *čyau-
a-a-a-ha-a-a-*a-
d--d--d--l--d--d--*d-

Indo-European linguistic comparison

Because Kurdish is an Indo-European language, there are many words that are cognates in Kurdish and other Indo-European languages such as Avestan, Persian, Sanskrit, German, English, Norwegian, Latin and Greek. (Source: Altiranisches Wörterbuch (1904) for the first two and last six.)

Kurdish Avestan Persian Sanskrit Greek English German Swedish Latin Lithuanian Russian PIE
ez "I" azəm adam [Old Persian] aham egō I ( < OE ) ich jag ego ja (related to OCS azŭ) *h₁eĝh₂om
lep "paw" palāme "palm" (OE lōf "fillet, band") to lob (OHG lappo "palm (of the hand)") (hand)love "palm (of the hand)" labor (hand)work lṓpa "paw, claw" lápa "paw"*tlāp-
jin "woman" ɣənā- "woman" zan janay- gynē queen (OHG quena) kvinna genus "birth, origin" (OPruss. genna) žená "wife" *gʷenh₂-
leystin (bileyzim) "to play (I play)" ley ley kardan(to jump with one foot) réjati ālma "jump" (OE lācan "to play") leich leka láigyti *(e)leig'- "to jump, to spring, to play"
mezin, gewre "great" maz-, mazant masan (middle Persian), gošn "numerous" mah(ī)-/mahānt-megas much ( < OE mićil, myćil) (OHG mihhil) mycket "much" magnus moshch "power" *meĝh₂- "big, great"
mêzer "headband/turban" Miθra "binding", "god name" *Miça "god name"(Old Persian) mitra "headband, turban", mitre "belt, turban" metat' "to sew, to tack" *mei- "to tie"
pez "sheep"pasu- "sheep, goat"boz "goat"paśu "animal" poemne "herd" fee ( < OE feoh "cattle") Vieh "cattle" får "sheep" "domestic animal" pecus "cattle" pekus "ox" pasti "to herd" *pek̂-u- "sheep"
çiya چيا),[61] kash[62] کاش) "mountain" kūh, chakād "peak/summit"kakúd-, kakúbh- "peak/summit" koryfē "top" kupfa[63][64] Gipfel "peak/summit" cacūmen kucha "pile" *kak-, *kakud- "top"
jîyar "alive" jiyan "to live" gaêm [gaya] zend[e] "alive", zî[stan] "to live", zaideh "child" jīv- zoi "life", "live" quick quick "bright" kvick "quick" vīvus "alive", vīvō "live", vīta "life" gývas žyzn' "life", žyvój "living, alive" *gʷih₃(u̯)-
[di] [a]zan[im] "I know" zan[în] "to know" zan- [mi]dān[am] "I know", dān[estan] "to know" jān- [gi]gnō[skō] know kennen kunna "to be able to", "to know" nō[scō], [co]gn[itus] žin[au]"I know" žin[oti] "to know" znat' "to know" *ĝneh₃-

Grammar

Main article: Kurdish grammar

Vocabulary

The bulk of the vocabulary in Kurdish is of Iranian origin, especially of northwestern Iranian. A considerable number of loanwords come from Semitic, mainly Arabic, which entered through Islam and historical relations with Arab tribes. Yet, a smaller group of loanwords which are of Armenian, Caucasian, and Turkic origins are used in Kurdish, besides some European words. There are also Kurdish words with no clear etymology.

Writing system

Main article: Kurdish alphabets
Kurdish restaurant sign written in Arabic script

The Kurdish language has been written using four different writing systems. In Iraq and Iran it is written using an Arabic script, composed by Sa'id Kaban Sedqi. More recently, it is sometimes written with a Latin alphabet in Iraq. In Turkey, Syria, and Armenia, it is now written using a Latin script. Kurdish was also written in the Arabic script in Turkey and Syria until 1932. There is a proposal for a unified international recognized Kurdish alphabet based on ISO-8859-1[65] called Yekgirtú. Kurdish in the former USSR is written with a Cyrillic alphabet. Kurdish has even been written in the Armenian alphabet in Soviet Armenia and in the Ottoman Empire (a translation of the Gospels in 1857[66] and of all New Testament in 1872).

See also

References

  1. Only very rough estimates are possible. SIL Ethnologue gives estimates broken down by dialect group, totalling 31 million, but with the caveat of "Very provisional figures for Northern Kurdish speaker population". Ethnologue estimates for dialect groups: Northern: 20.2M (undated; 15M in Turkey for 2009), Central: 6.75M (2009), Southern: 3M (2000), Laki: 1M (2000). The Swedish Nationalencyklopedin listed Kurdish in its "Världens 100 största språk 2007" (The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007), citing an estimate of 20.6 million native speakers.
  2. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Kurdish". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  3. 1 2 3 Kaya, Mehmet. The Zaza Kurds of Turkey: A Middle Eastern Minority in a Globalised Society. ISBN 1-84511-875-8
  4. 1 2 http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/Dargin_-_Working_Paper_-_FINAL.pdf
  5. 1 2 http://web.archive.org/web/20120118184312/http://gulf2000.columbia.edu/images/maps/Mid_East_Linguistic_lg.jpg. Archived from the original on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. 1 2 A Modern History of the Kurds: Third Edition - David McDowall - Google Books. Books.google.com. 2004-05-14. Retrieved 2012-12-18.
  7. Demographic data is unreliable especially in Turkey, where the largest number of Kurds reside, as Turkey has not permitted gathering ethnic or linguistic census data since 1965; estimates of ethnic Kurds in Turkey range from 10% to 25%, or 8 to 20 million people.
  8. "Kurmanji". Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  9. "Kurmanji Kurdish" (PDF). Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  10. Allison, Christine. The Yezidi oral tradition in Iraqi Kurdistan. 2001. "However, it was the southern dialect of Kurdish, Sorani, the majority language of the Iraqi Kurds, which received sanction as an official language of Iraq."
  11. Kurdish language issue and a divisive approach. http://www.kurdishacademy.org/?q=node/194
  12. Gernot Windfuhr, ed., 2009. The Iranian Languages. Routledge.
  13. Bruinessen, M.M. van. (1994). Kurdish nationalism and competing ethnic loyalties
  14. Paul, Ludwig (2008). "Kurdish language I. History of the Kurdish language". In Yarshater, Ehsan. Encyclopædia Iranica. London and New York: Routledge. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  15. Windfuhr, Gernot (1975), "Isoglosses: A Sketch on Persians and Parthians, Kurds and Medes", Monumentum H.S. Nyberg II (Acta Iranica-5), Leiden: 457-471
  16. Professor Garnik Asatrian (Yerevan University) (2009)."Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds", Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp. 1–58, 2009 Published in 2009, Iran and the Caucasus, 13, pp.1-58.
  17. Hassanpour, A. (1992). Nationalism and language in Kurdistan. San Francisco: Mellon Press. Also mentioned in: kurdishacademy.org
  18. 1 2 Postgate, J.N., Languages of Iraq, ancient and modern, [Iraq]: British School of Archaeology in Iraq, 2007, ISBN 978-0-903472-21-0, p.139
  19. 1 2 3 Philip G. Kreyenbroek, "On the Kurdish Language", a chapter in the book The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview. The book is previewable at Google Book Search.
  20. Joyce Blau, Methode de Kurde: Sorani, Editions L'Harmattan (2000), p. 20
  21. 1 2 Ranjbar, Vahid. Dastur-e Zaban-e Kurdi-ye Kermanshahi. Kermanshah: Taq-Bostan. 1388
  22. 1 2 D.N. MacKenzie, Language in Kurds & Kurdistan, Encyclopaedia of Islam.
  23. Archived 1 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  24. Glottolog 2.3, Subfamily: Central Iran Kermanic. "The Central dialects thus constitute the southernmost group of the so-called Northwest Iranian dialects," Central Dialects (iranicaonline.org)
  25. Philip G. Kreyenbroek, "On the Kurdish Language", a chapter in the book The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview.
  26. Meri, Josef W. Medieval Islamic Civilization: A-K, index. p444
  27. Edmonds, Cecil. Kurds, Turks, and Arabs: politics, travel, and research in north-eastern Iraq, 1919–1925. Oxford University Press, 1957.
  28. J. N. Postgate, Languages of Iraq, ancient and modern, British School of Archaeology in Iraq, [Iraq]: British School of Archaeology in Iraq, 2007, p. 138.
  29. http://www.let.uu.nl/~martin.vanbruinessen/personal/publications/Bruinessen_Ethnic_identity_Kurds.pdf
  30. Abd al-Jabbar, Falih. Ayatollahs, sufis and ideologues: state, religion and social movements in Iraq. University of Virginia 2008.
  31. Sykes, Mark. The Caliphs' last heritage: a short history of the Turkish Empire
  32. O'Shea, Maria. Trapped between the map and reality: geography and perceptions of Kurdistan. ISBN 0-415-94766-9.
  33. Library Information and Research Service. The Middle East, abstracts and index
  34. Meiselas, Susan. Kurdistan: in the shadow of history. Random House, 1997.
  35. Ibn-Waḥšīya, Aḥmad Ibn-ʿAlī (1806). Ancient Alphabets and Hieroglyphic Characters Explained: With an Account of the Egyptian Priests, Their Classes, Initiation, and Sacrifices. Translated by Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall. Bulmer. p. 53. Retrieved March 28, 2013.
  36. Jonh S. Guest, The Yazidis: A Study In Survival, Routledge Publishers, 1987, ISBN 0-7103-0115-4, ISBN 978-0-7103-0115-4, 299 pp. (see pages 18, 19, 32)
  37. Ernest R. McCarus, Kurdish Language Studies, The Middle East Journal, Published by Middle East Institute, Washington, 1960, p.325
  38. Kurdistan and Its Christians, Mirella Galetti, World Congress of Kurdish Studies, 6–9 September 2006
  39. Ross, Michael. The Volunteer (chapter: The Road to Ankara)
  40. Repression of Kurds in Syria is widespread, Amnesty International Report, March 2005.
  41. http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/11/syria-kurdistan-self-governance-teach-kurdish-language.html
  42. "Special Focus Cases: Leyla Zana, Prisoner of Conscience". Amnestyusa.org. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  43. "Kurdish performers banned, Appeal from International PEN". Freemuse.org. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  44. Karakaş, Saniye (March 2004). "Submission to the Sub-Commission on Promotion and Protection of Human Rights: Working Group of Minorities; Tenth Session, Agenda Item 3 (a)". United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Archived from the original (MS Word) on 2007-06-28. Retrieved 2006-11-07. Kurds have been officially allowed since September 2003 to take Kurdish names, but cannot use the letters x, w, or q, which are common in Kurdish but do not exist in Turkey's version of the Latin alphabet. [...] Those letters, however, are used in Turkey in the names of companies, TV and radio channels, and trademarks. For example Turkish Army has company under the name of AXA OYAK and there is SHOW TV television channel in Turkey.
  45. "Turkey to allow Kurdish lessons in schools". Aljazeera. 12 June 2012. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  46. The Kurdish Language and Literature, by Joyce Blau, Professor of Kurdish language and civilization at the National Institute of Oriental Language and Civilization of the University of Paris (INALCO)
  47. The language policy of Iran from State policy on the Kurdish language: the politics of status planning by Amir Hassanpour, University of Toronto
  48. "Neighboring Kurds Travel to Study in Iraq". Npr.org. 9 March 2005. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  49. Turkey to get Kurdish television Archived 18 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  50. "TRT HABER - Özel Kürtçe Kanala Yeşil Işık". Trt.net.tr. 28 November 2011. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  51. "On trial for speaking Kurdish". ANF-Firatnews. 11 May 2011. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  52. "Kurdish TV starts broadcasting in Turkey". Kurdmedia.com. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  53. ". Number of resident population by selected nationality, mother tongue in 2009" (PDF). Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  54. "Table 4.1.1 Population by individual ethnic groups" (PDF). Government of Kazakhstan. stat.kz. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2012. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  55. McCarus, Ernest N. (1997), "Kurdish Phonology", in Kaye, Alan S.; Daniels, Peter T., Phonologies of Asia & Africa (Including the Caucasus) 2, Winona Lake, Indiana: EISENBRAUNS, p. 694, ISBN 1-57506-017-5
  56. McCarus, Ernest N. (1997), "Kurdish Phonology", in Kaye, Alan S.; Daniels, Peter T., Phonologies of Asia & Africa (Including the Caucasus) 2, Winona Lake, Indiana: EISENBRAUNS, p. 693, ISBN 1-57506-017-5
  57. Haig, Geoffrey; Yaron Matras (2002). "Kurdish linguistics: a brief overview" (PDF). Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung (Berlin) 55 (1): 3–14. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  58. 1 2 "The Kurdish Academy of Language - Unified Kurdish Alphabet - IPA". Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  59. "The Kurdish Academy of Language - Unified Kurdish Vowel Phonemes". Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  60. McCarus, Ernest N. (1997), "Kurdish Phonology", in Kaye, Alan S.; Daniels, Peter T., Phonologies of Asia & Africa (Including the Caucasus) 2, Winona Lake, Indiana: EISENBRAUNS, p. 696, ISBN 1-57506-017-5
  61. Feryad fazil Omar: Kurdisch-Deutsches Wörterbuch (Soranî), Institut für Kurdische Studien e.V., Berlin 2005, p.332 ISBN 978-3-932574-10-8
  62. Abdul Rahman Sharafkondi Hazhar: (1st ed. 1990) Farhang Kurdi-Farsi, Tehran, 4th ed. 2005, p. 601 ISBN 964-435-701-9 and ISBN 964-376-341-2
  63. kupfa is Old High German; Kuppel is Middle High German, Kopf is head,Oskar Schade (1866)
  64. Georg Scherer (1588)
  65. "The Kurdish Unified Alphabet". www.kurdishacademy.org. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  66. "The Gospels in Kurdish in Armenian characters, 1857, Constantinople". Google.com. 2010-02-18. Retrieved 2014-03-02.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kurdish language.
Kurdish edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soranî Kurdish edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Laki test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
Southern Kurdish test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
Kurmanji test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
Wikivoyage has phrasebook for Kurdish.
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