| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Kurdish (Kurdî) | |
|---|---|
| Spoken in: | Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Armenia, Lebanon |
| Region: | - |
| Total speakers: | 35 Million |
| Ranking: | 29 |
| Genetic classification: | Indo-European Indo-Iranian |
| Official status | |
| Official language of: | part of Iraq |
The Kurdic languages (also called dialects of Kurdish) are spoken in the region loosely called Kurdistan including Kurdish populations in parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey.
The Kurdic languages belongs to the Iranian branch of the Indo-European family of languages, being closest to Persian among other languages. Kurdic dialects and languages are members of the northwestern subdivision of the Iranian branch of this largest family of languages in the world. The Kurdic languages, mostly mutually unintelligible, are Kurmanji , SoraniSorani is an Iranian language, belonging to the Kurdic group. It is spoken by a total of approx. 6,000,000 people in Iraq and Iran. Sorani is a script language, and is written from right to left. An example of written Sorani can be found at http://www., GoraniGorani could be the name of: Gorani, a village in the prefecture of Laconia Gorani, people and the English name of their language (actually Goranski living in Kosovo Gorani, a small group of Kurds and their dialect of the Kurdish language in Iran and Iraq and Auramani . The Zaza language is also considered a Kurdic language by some but many linguists do not agree with that. The Kurdic languages have their own historical development, continuity, grammatical system and rich living vocabularies. The claim that the Kurdic languages have as their direct ancestor the language of the Iranian Medes is not supported by the scientific and linguistical facts and data. Ca. 25 million people in the western parts of the Iranian Plateau and Eastern Anatolia, speak different Kurdic languages.
Kurdic languages (also called Kurdish dialects) can be divided into three primaries groups:
In some Kurdish sources the Persid language of Luri, a south west Iranian language has been classed as a subgroup of Kurdic languages. Although most linguists agree that Luri is from the same branch as Persian and belongs to the Persid (Persian-based) languages. There is no standard nomenclature for the divisions of Kurdish dialects, not just in the works of Western scholars but among the Kurds themselves. All the native designators for local language and dialects are based on the way the spoken language of one group sounds to the unfamiliar ears of the other. Dimila and their vernacular, Dimili, are therefore called Zaza by the Badínaní speakers, with reference to the preponderance of Z sounds in their language (Nikitin 1926). The Dimila call the Badínaní dialect and its speakers Xerewere. The Gorans refer to the Soraní as Kurkure and Wawa. The Soraní speakers in turn call the Gorans and their vernacular, Goraní, Mecú Mecú, and refer to the tongue and the speakers of Badínaní as Ji Babu.