信息不完整 “Dardskie i nuristanskie jazyki” . Dzˇoy Èdel’man (1999)
濒危
20 percent certain, based on the evidence available
400-500
Spoken in Zemiaki village by 400-500 people, who call their language Jamlám basa. Some consider it a dialect of Waigali.
地点
Afghanistan
地点描述
Kunar Province
信息不完整 “South Asia and the Middle East” (289-348 ch. 4) . George Van Driem (2007) , Christopher Mosely · London and NewYork: Routledge
Unknown
"Identified as a distinct Nuristani language only in 1999. Number of speakers unknown; endangered."
地点
Afghanistan
地点描述
Kunar province.
信息不完整 “Dardestān ii. Language” . Edel'man, D.I. (1994)
语言环境评论
The Nūrestānī languages (also known traditionally as Kafiri languages) are sometimes included as a western subgroup of the Dardic group of languages (see Shaw, 1876, pp. 146-47; Grierson; Morgenstierne, 1945; idem, 1974). They are the languages of Afghan Nūrestān, known as Kafiristan until the people adopted Islam on the eve of the 20th century. This subgroup includes Kati (including the eastern dialect Bashgali), Waigali (or Wai, Wai-alā), and related Tregami (or Gambiri) and Zemiaki; Ashkun and the closely related language or dialect Wamai; and Prasun (or Paruni, Wasin-veri, Veron). These languages have much in common with the Dardic languages and are spoken in close geographical proximity to them, but their origin is not the same (see below). The attribution of the Dameli language, which exhibits both Nūrestānī and Dardic features, is not clear. Some authors also include in the Dardic group the Ḍumaki language, spoken by a people scattered in groups in Hunza and Nagar. Genetically, however, it belongs to the Central Indo-Aryan languages (being close to Gypsy), rather than to the Dardic group.
地点
Part of Nūrestān and adjacent areas along the Kabul river and its tributaries in the mountain region that encompasses northeastern Afghanistan, northern Pakistan, and northwestern India