Indo-Iranian languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Indo-Iranian | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: | South Asia, Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan |
| Genetic classification: | Indo-European Indo-Iranian |
| Subdivisions: |
Indo-Aryan / Sanskrit
|
| Indo-European |
|---|
| Indo-European languages |
| Albanian | Anatolian | Armenian Baltic | Celtic | Dacian | Germanic Greek | Indo-Iranian | Italic | Phrygian Slavic | Thracian | Tocharian |
| Indo-European peoples |
| Albanians | Anatolians | Armenians Balts | Celts | Germanic peoples Greeks | Indo-Aryans | Indo-Iranians | Iranians Italic peoples | Slavs | Thracians | Tocharians |
| Proto-Indo-Europeans |
| Language | Society | Religion |
| Urheimat hypotheses |
| Kurgan hypothesis | Anatolia Armenia | India | PCT |
| Indo-European studies |
The Indo-Iranian language group constitutes the easternmost extant branch of the Indo-European family of languages. It consists of three language groups: the Indo-Aryan, Iranian and Dardic. The term Aryan languages is also used to refer to the Indo-Iranian languages <ref>Numeral Types and Changes Worldwide, by Jadranka (EDT) Gvozdanovic, Language Arts & Disciplines,1999, Page 221 [1]</ref>. According to most Aryan migration theories, speakers of the Proto-Indo-Iranian language, who referred to themselves as Aryans, settled east and south of the Caspian Sea in Northern India, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan. Their expansion is believed to have been connected with the invention of the chariot.
The contemporary Indo-Iranian languages form the largest sub-branch of Indo-European, with more than one billion speakers in total, stretching from Europe (Romani) and the Caucasus (Ossetian) to East India (Bengali). SIL in a 2005 estimate counts a total of 308 varieties, the largest in terms of native speakers being Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu, ca. 540 million), Bengali (ca. 200 million), Punjabi (ca. 100 million), Marathi and Persian (ca. 70 million each), Gujarati (ca. 45 million), Oriya (ca. 30 million), Kurdish and Pashto (ca. 25 million each) and Sindhi (ca. 20 million).
[edit] Subdivisions
- Vedic Sanskrit
- Sanskrit
- Mitanni
- Pāli
- Central Zone
- Hindi language
- Hindustani language
- Punjabi language
- Romany language – the language of the Roma and Sinti
- Urdu
- Eastern Zone (Magadhan Prakrit languages)
- Northern Zone (Pahari languages)
- Northwestern Zone
- Southern Zone
- Western Zone
- Eastern Iranian
- Northeastern
- Avestan language (extinct)
- Scythian language (extinct)
- Saka language (extinct)
- Ossetian language
- Sogdian (extinct), Yagnobi
- Bactrian (extinct)
- Southeastern
- Northeastern
- Western Iranian
- Northwestern
- Southwestern ("Persid")
- Old Persian (extinct)
- Middle Persian (extinct)
- Persian language
- Luri language
- Tat language
- Dameli language
- Domaaki language
- Gawar-Bati language
- Kalasha-mun language
- Kashmiri language
- Khowar language
- Kohistani language
- Ningalami language
- Pashayi language
- Phalura language
- Shina language
- Shumashti language
- Askunu language (Ashkun)
- Kamkata-viri language (Bashgali)
- Vasi-vari language (Prasuni)
- Tregami language
- Kalasha-ala language (Waigali)
[edit] References
Cited references <references />
[edit] See also
| Indo-Iranian languages | |||
| Indo-Aryan | Sanskrit: Vedic Sanskrit - Classical Sanskrit | Prakrit: Pāli - Magadhi | Hindustani (Registers: Hindi, Urdu) | Bengali (Dialects: Chittagonian, Sylheti) | Angika | Assamese | Bhojpuri | Bishnupriya Manipuri | Dhivehi | Dogri | Gujarati | Konkani | Mahl | Maithili | Marathi | Mitanni | Nepali | Oriya | Punjabi | Romani | Sindhi | Sinhala | ||
| Iranian | Avestan | Persian: Old Persian - Middle Persian (Pahlavi) - Modern Persian (Varieties: Farsi, Dari, Tajik) Bukhori | Bactrian | Balochi | Dari (Zoroastrianism) | Gilaki | Kurdish | Mazandarani | Ossetic | Pamir | Pashto | Saka | Sarikoli | Scythian | Shughni | Sogdian | Talysh | Tat | Wakhi | Yaghnobi | Zazaki | | ||
| Dardic | Dameli | Domaaki | Gawar-Bati | Kalasha-mun | Kashmiri | Khowar | Kohistani | Nangalami | Pashayi | Palula | Shina | Shumashti | ||
| Nuristani | Askunu | Kalasha-ala | Kamkata-viri | Tregami | Vasi-vari | ||
bs:Indoiranski jezici bg:Индо-ирански езици ca:Llengües indoiranianes cs:Indoíránské jazyky da:Indoiranske sprog de:Indoiranische Sprachen es:Lenguas indo-iranias fa:زبانهای هندوایرانی fr:Langues indo-iraniennes ko:인도이란어파 hi:हिन्द-ईरानी भाषाएँ he:שפות הודו-איראניות hu:Indoiráni nyelvek nl:Indo-Iraanse talen ja:インド・イラン語派 pl:Języki indoirańskie pt:Línguas indo-iranianas ro:Limbile indo-iraniene fi:Indoiranilaiset kielet sv:Indoiranska språk ta:இந்தோ-ஈரானிய மொழிகள் th:ภาษากลุ่มอินโด-อิเรเนียน
zh:印度-伊朗语族
