Using a corpus of contemporary Yazdi Zoroastrian oral literature, this article demonstrates that the Persian dialect found in many Zoroastrian songs is different from both Standard Persian and local (Yazdi) Persian. It is argued that Zoroastrian oral literature in New Persian preserves the features of a Persian dialect previously spoken or used by Zoroastrians. On the basis of phonological and morphosyntactic comparison, this article shows that it is likely that this variety of Persian was influenced by Gavruni, the traditional language of the Zoroastrians of Iran.Descriptive and Comparative Linguistic
Au cours de cet article très bien documenté, l’A. expose à travers de nombreux exemples ce que les t...
The present paper aims to present a sociolinguistic survey of Kholosi, an Indo-Aryan language that i...
The main West Iranian languages, i.e. Old Persian, Parthian, Middle Persian, New Persian and – in so...
Using a corpus of contemporary Yazdi Zoroastrian oral literature, this article demonstrates that the...
The linguistic situation in Iran at the beginning of the Islamic era is described in a famous passag...
The Zoroastrian religion, taking its name from the prophet Zoroaster, Greek version of the Avestan n...
The aim of the present paper is to illustrate as a case study, the linguistic and stylistic peculiar...
Persian surrounds much of the Tabari (or Māzandarāni) speaking area, that is, the province of Māzand...
The manuscripts of the Iranian Pahlavi Yasna contain two consecutive colophons, the second of which ...
The so-called Central Plateau Dialects or simply Central Dialects belong to the South Median group o...
Located in the Semnān area (midway between Tehran and Khorasan), the town of Šahmirzād and its neigh...
492 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.This research aims to investi...
The article offers remarks on the history and transmission of the Persian word gabr and a number of...
The Āẕar Kaivānīs, a syncretistic religious school in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, combi...
http://www.eacrh.net/ojs/index.php/crossroads/article/view/84This article is about the impact of pre...
Au cours de cet article très bien documenté, l’A. expose à travers de nombreux exemples ce que les t...
The present paper aims to present a sociolinguistic survey of Kholosi, an Indo-Aryan language that i...
The main West Iranian languages, i.e. Old Persian, Parthian, Middle Persian, New Persian and – in so...
Using a corpus of contemporary Yazdi Zoroastrian oral literature, this article demonstrates that the...
The linguistic situation in Iran at the beginning of the Islamic era is described in a famous passag...
The Zoroastrian religion, taking its name from the prophet Zoroaster, Greek version of the Avestan n...
The aim of the present paper is to illustrate as a case study, the linguistic and stylistic peculiar...
Persian surrounds much of the Tabari (or Māzandarāni) speaking area, that is, the province of Māzand...
The manuscripts of the Iranian Pahlavi Yasna contain two consecutive colophons, the second of which ...
The so-called Central Plateau Dialects or simply Central Dialects belong to the South Median group o...
Located in the Semnān area (midway between Tehran and Khorasan), the town of Šahmirzād and its neigh...
492 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.This research aims to investi...
The article offers remarks on the history and transmission of the Persian word gabr and a number of...
The Āẕar Kaivānīs, a syncretistic religious school in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, combi...
http://www.eacrh.net/ojs/index.php/crossroads/article/view/84This article is about the impact of pre...
Au cours de cet article très bien documenté, l’A. expose à travers de nombreux exemples ce que les t...
The present paper aims to present a sociolinguistic survey of Kholosi, an Indo-Aryan language that i...
The main West Iranian languages, i.e. Old Persian, Parthian, Middle Persian, New Persian and – in so...