Kalasha
[aka Kalasa, Kalashamon, Kalash]Classification: Indo-European
·threatened
Classification: Indo-European
·threatened
Kalasa, Kalashamon, Kalash, Dardu |
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Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Northwestern Zone. Dardic |
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Roman |
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ISO 639-3; Glottolog |
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kls; kala1372 |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Kalasha (Pakistan) - Language Snapshot” . Qandeel Hussain and Jeff Mielke (2020) , Peter K. Austin · ELPublishing
The younger generation learns Kalasha from family or at school. Community language shift is moving toward other languages of the area, especially Khowar and Pashto, due to religious conversion and migration.
Khowar
Kati
Pashto
Urdu
English
Punjabi
Script developed with Gregory and Elsa Cooper
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
Information from: “Personal Communication on Kalasha Language” . Pierpaolo DiCarlo (2012)
Northern variety (Birir, Rumbur, Bumburet): N35 38.715 E71 42.310.
Southern variety (Urtsun): N35 29.530 E71 42.089
Information from: “Glottolog” .
Information from: “Dardic” (818-894) . Elena Bashir (2003) , George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain · London & New York: Routledge
Khowar; Kativiri
Southern Chitral
Information from: “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
Information from: “Indo-iranian Frontier Languages” . Bashir, Elena (2006)
Persian; Urdu; Khowar
Since Urdu became the national language of Pakistan in 1947 and increasingly functions as the country’s lingua franca, it has replaced Persian as a compulsory language in the curriculum. From the 1980s the presence of Persian in the educational system became negligible. Despite this, a significant influx of additional Perso-Arabic words has entered the lexicons of all the languages of Pakistan through Urdu.
Information from: “Language policy, multilingualism and language vitality in Pakistan” (73-106) . Tariq Rahman (2006) , Anju Saxena and Lars Borin · Mouton de Gruyter
"The Kalasha community, which follows an ancient religion and lives in valleys in Chitral, is in danger of losing its languages. Some young people are reported to have left the language when they converted to Islam (Decker in SSNP Vol. 5, 1992: 112)."
"Kalash Valleys (Chitral) southern"