Tirahi
[también conocido como Tirāhī, Dardu,]Clasificación: Indo-European
·formato
Clasificación: Indo-European
·formato
Tirāhī, Dardu |
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Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Northwestern Zone |
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ISO 639-3 |
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tra |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
Ethnic population: Possibly 5,000
Most have shifted to Southern Pashto
Southeast of Jalalabad, west of Khyber Pass, Nangarhar village
La información está incompleta “Dardestān ii. Language” . Edel'man, D.I. (1994)
The central subgroup is further subdivided into northern and southern groupings. The northern grouping includes Khowar (or Chitrali, Chitrari, Chatrori, Arniya) and Kalasha in the Chitral region. The southern grouping includes Tirahi, Gawar (or Gawar-bati, lit., “language of the Gawar people”), Katarkalai (or Wotapuri, referring to another dialect), Shumashti, Glangali (closely related Ningalami, reported in the literature but apparently no longer extant), and Pashai, a large group of extremely divergent dialects or closely related languages, in the southern part of Nūrestān and adjacent areas.
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
La información está incompleta “Glottolog” .
La información está incompleta “Notes on Tirahi” (161-189) . Georg Morgenstierne (1934)
Spoken in a few villages southeast of Jalalabad in Afghanistan