Tajik | |
---|---|
Tajiki Persian | |
Тоҷикӣ (Tojikī), форсии тоҷикӣ (Forsii Tojikī) | |
Native to | Tajikistan Uzbekistan |
Region | Central Asia |
Ethnicity | 8.0 million Tajiks in Tajikistan (2020)[1] |
Native speakers | 10.0 million for all countries (8.0 million in Tajikistan 2020)[1] |
Dialects | |
| |
Official status | |
Official language in | Tajikistan |
Recognised minority language in | |
Regulated by | Rudaki Institute of Language and Literature |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | tg |
ISO 639-2 | tgk |
ISO 639-3 | tgk |
Glottolog | taji1245 |
Linguasphere | 58-AAC-ci |
Areas where Tajik speakers comprise a majority shown in dark purple, and areas where Tajik speakers comprise a sizeable minority shown in light purple | |
Part of a series on |
Tajiks |
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History and culture |
Population |
Tajik,[2][a] Tajik Persian, Tajiki Persian,[b] also called Tajiki, is the variety of Persian spoken in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan by Tajiks. It is closely related to neighbouring Dari of Afghanistan with which it forms a continuum of mutually intelligible varieties of the Persian language. Several scholars consider Tajik as a dialectal variety of Persian rather than a language on its own.[3][4][5] The popularity of this conception of Tajik as a variety of Persian was such that, during the period in which Tajik intellectuals were trying to establish Tajik as a language separate from Persian, prominent intellectual Sadriddin Ayni counterargued that Tajik was not a "bastardised dialect" of Persian.[6] The issue of whether Tajik and Persian are to be considered two dialects of a single language or two discrete languages[7] has political aspects to it.[6]
By way of Early New Persian, Tajik, like Iranian Persian and Dari Persian, is a continuation of Middle Persian, the official administrative, religious and literary language of the Sasanian Empire (224–651 CE), itself a continuation of Old Persian, the language of the Achaemenid Empire (550–330 BC).[8][9][10][11]
Tajiki is one of the two official languages of Tajikistan, the other being Russian[12][13] as the official interethnic language. In Afghanistan, this language is less influenced by Turkic languages and is regarded as a form of Dari, which has co-official language status.[14] The Tajiki Persian of Tajikistan has diverged from Persian as spoken in Afghanistan and even more from that of Iran due to political borders, geographical isolation, the standardisation process and the influence of Russian and neighbouring Turkic languages. The standard language is based on the northwestern dialects of Tajik (region of the old major city of Samarqand), which have been somewhat influenced by the neighbouring Uzbek language as a result of geographical proximity. Tajik also retains numerous archaic elements in its vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar that have been lost elsewhere in the Persophone world, in part due to its relative isolation in the mountains of Central Asia.
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