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The Yazghulami language (also Yazgulami, Yazgulyami, Iazgulem, Yazgulyam, Yazgulam, Yazgulyamskiy, Jazguljamskij, () is a member of the Southeastern subgroup of the
Iranian languages The Iranian languages, also called the Iranic languages, are a branch of the Indo-Iranian languages in the Indo-European language family that are spoken natively by the Iranian peoples, predominantly in the Iranian Plateau. The Iranian langu ...
, spoken by around 9,000 people along the Yazghulom River in
Gorno-Badakhshan Gorno-Badakhshan, officially the Badakhshan Mountainous Autonomous Region, is an autonomous region in eastern Tajikistan, in the Pamir Mountains. It makes up nearly forty-five percent of the country's land area but only two percent of its popul ...
,
Tajikistan Tajikistan, officially the Republic of Tajikistan, is a landlocked country in Central Asia. Dushanbe is the capital city, capital and most populous city. Tajikistan borders Afghanistan to the Afghanistan–Tajikistan border, south, Uzbekistan to ...
. Together with Shugni, it is classified in a Shugni-Yazgulami subgroup of the areal group of Pamir languages. Virtually all speakers of Yazghulami are bilingual in Tajik, the variety of the
Persian language Persian ( ), also known by its endonym and exonym, endonym Farsi (, Fārsī ), is a Western Iranian languages, Western Iranian language belonging to the Iranian languages, Iranian branch of the Indo-Iranian languages, Indo-Iranian subdivision ...
spoken in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The Yazghulami people are an exception among the speakers of Pamir languages in that they do not adhere to
Ismailism Ismailism () is a branch of Shia Islam. The Isma'ili () get their name from their acceptance of Imam Isma'il ibn Jafar as the appointed spiritual successor ( imām) to Ja'far al-Sadiq, wherein they differ from the Twelver Shia, who accept ...
.


Dialects

The Yazghulami language consists of two dialects: one of these is spoken higher in the mountains, the other lower. The differences are not significant and are limited to the vocabulary. Differences in the vocabulary are also detectable between the languages used in different villages in the lower mountains. The extinct Vanji language (also Vanži, Wanji) was once the nearest linguistic relative of Yazghulami. Yazghulami shares many grammatical and lexical features with the other languages spoken in the Pamirs, but even its most closely related living relative, Shughni, is not mutually intelligible with it.


History

The language was first recorded by Russian traveller G. Arandarenko in 1889, listing 34 Yazghulami words recorded in 1882. The language was described in greater detail by French linguist Robert Gauthiot in ''Notes sur le yazgoulami, dialecte iranien des Confins du Pamir'' (1916). The most significant research to date on the Yazghulami language was done by Russian linguist Dzhoi (Joy) I. Ėdel’man, resulting in multiple publications from the 1960s through the early 2000s. Most of her works are in the Russian language. In 1954 the Yazghulami living in villages at higher elevations (deeper into the Yazghulam valley) were resettled, about 20% of them forcibly, to the Vakhsh valley, where they live dispersed among the Tajiks, Uzbeks, Russians and other ethnic groups.


Phonology

The Yazghulami language has 45 phonemes: 8 vowels and 37 consonants. The phonology of the Yazghulami language differs from the basic "Shughni-Roshani" type in its system of
dorsal consonant Dorsal consonants are consonants articulated with the back of the tongue (the dorsum). They include the uvular, velar and, in some cases, alveolo-palatal and palatal consonants. They contrast with coronal consonants, articulated with the fle ...
s: in addition to the velar and uvular stops , , and fricatives , , , , Yazghulami has a palatalised and a labialised series , (palatalised velars), , , (labialised velars, there is no labialised voiced velar fricative) and , , (labialised uvulars). A significant number of labialised consonants etymologically correspond to Proto-Iranian ''*Cv'' or ''*Cu'', e.g. ''xʷarɡ'' < ''*hvaharā-'' "sister", while others are unrelated to Proto-Iranian ''v'', e.g. ''skʷon'' < ''skana-'' "puppy". This threefold system of articulation of dorsals has been compared typologically to the three reconstructed rows of dorsals in the
Proto-Indo-European language Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European language family. No direct record of Proto-Indo-European exists; its proposed features have been derived by linguistic reconstruction from documented Indo-Eu ...
.


Vowels

The following are the vowels of Yazghulami: * was recognized as a separate phoneme by earlier researchers, but a recent study finds that it now contrasts with only in the speech of older speakers.


Consonants

The following are the consonants of Yazghulami: * Sounds can also be heard as sounds in free variation. * The phoneme is somewhat marginal, occurring in only a few words.


Alphabet

The letter gamma ɣ, and in its accentuated forms, uses the form of the Greek gamma , in both uppercase and lowercase.


Grammar

The basic word order of Yazghulami is subject–object–verb (SOV). In the past tense, Yazghulami has tripartite marking—one of the very few languages in the world to have this feature. This means that the subject of an
intransitive In grammar, an intransitive verb is a verb, aside from an auxiliary verb, whose context does not entail a transitive object. That lack of an object distinguishes intransitive verbs from transitive verbs, which entail one or more objects. Additi ...
sentence is marked differently from both the subject and the object of a transitive sentence. Dixon, R.M.W. (1994). ''Ergativity''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 40. This tripartite alignment only appears in singular pronouns in past tense clauses. Plural pronouns in past tense clauses and all pronouns in non-past tense clauses show nominative-accusative alignment. Morphological marking of core cases does not occur on nouns, however, the preposition ''na(ʒ)'' "from" is optionally used to indicate that the following noun is the direct object. All nominal forms may be marked for dative case or for either of two genitive cases by means of enclitics: ''=ra'' (dative), ''=i'' (genitive 1), and ''=me'' (genitive 2). The genitive 1 case marks attributive possession and is practically identical in function with Tajik Persian ''izofat'' ''=i'' which links a modifier to its noun. However, the order of constituents in the two languages is reversed, meaning that in Yazghulami the modifier precedes its noun (''qatol-i kud'' "big-''i'' house") whereas in Tajik Persian the modifier follows the noun (''χona-i kalon'' "house-''i'' big"). The genitive 2 case is used only to mark predicative possession, e.g. ''ju kud=ai mo=me'' "this house is mine".


Literature

*Ėdel’man, D. I. (1966). ''Jazguljamskij jazyk''. Moscow: Nauka. *Ėdel’man, D. I. (1971). ''Jazguljamsko-russkij slovar’''. Moscow: Nauka. *Edelman, D. I. and Leila R. Dodykhudoeva. (2009). "The Pamir Languages" in: Gernot Windfuhr (ed.), ''The Iranian Languages'', 773‑786. London: Routledge. *Gauthiot, Robert. (1916). "Notes sur le Yazgoulami: Dialecte Iranien des Confins du Pamir". ''Journal Asiatique'', vol. 11, no. 7, p. 239‑270. * Grierson, George A. (1920).
Ishkashmi, Zebaki, and Yazghulami, an account of three Eranian dialects."
London, Royal Asiatic Societ


Yazghulami wordlist from Grierson article


*Jamison, Rachel E. (2022).
The enclitic =da and the marking of indicative and subjunctive mood in Yazghulami
' (MA Thesis). Dallas International University. *Payne, John. (1989). "Pamir languages" in: Rüdiger Schmitt (ed.), ''Compendium Linguarum Iranicarum'', 417‑444. Wiesbaden: Reichert. * Ivan Ivanovich Zarubin, Zarubin, I. I. (1936). "Two Yazghulāmī Texts". ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies'', University of London, vol. 8, no. 2/3, p. 875‑881.


References


External links


The Lord's Prayer in YazgulyamiOLAC Resources for YazgulyamThe Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire: The YazgulamisWorld Atlas of Language Structures (WALS): YazgulyamYazghulami Dictionary on WebonaryYazghulami Picture Dictionary
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yazghulami Language Pamir languages Eastern Iranian languages Languages of Tajikistan Endangered Iranian languages Endangered languages of Tajikistan