Small chart I created to show some of the pronouns.
Like Romance languages, the plural form of you, can be used to express formality or politeness and respect. Thus, SHOMA can be used for polite form of saying you for one person (singular). Likewise, ISHAN is used to express polite form of he and she.
Crazy voyage into Semitic and Indo-Aryan languages from Horn of Africa to Middle-Asia.
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Persian Speaking Countries
I created this little graphic on my Macintosh to document the Persian speaking countries Tajikistan (تاجيکستان), Afghanistan (افغانستان), and Iran (ايران). Within those countries they call the language Tajiki (تاجيکى), Dari (درى) meaning court (دربار) language, and Farsi or more correctly Parsi (پارسى).
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Arabic Pronoun Basics
I found these pronouns in my book, and so here they are:
There are actually many more pronouns, total of 12, so consider this a starter set of pronouns for Arabic. The ANTA and ANTI are used for speaking with male and female respectively.
I just noticed the graphic I created (using Open Office on the Mac), I spelled HUYA using the wrong vowel marker; I'll fix it later.
There are actually many more pronouns, total of 12, so consider this a starter set of pronouns for Arabic. The ANTA and ANTI are used for speaking with male and female respectively.
I just noticed the graphic I created (using Open Office on the Mac), I spelled HUYA using the wrong vowel marker; I'll fix it later.
Monday, September 6, 2010
Short Vowels of Arabic
The first thing that threw me off is the short vowels. In Arabic script, short vowels are implied typically, so words are spelled with consonants. For teaching words or reading religious texts, there are diacritical marks used to denote the proper sound of the consonant with the implicit short vowel:
- the fatḥa (فتحة) appears as [ـَ] and represents a short short /a/.
- This sounds like the a in cat.
- Arabic example: <دَ> /da/.
- the kasra (كسرة) appears as [ـِ] and represents a short /i/.
- This is like the sound of i in sit.
- Arabic example: <دِ> /di/.
- the ḍamma (ضمة) appears as [ـُ] and represents a short /u/.
- This is like the sound of u in put.
- Arabic example: <دُ> /du/.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
New Discoveries
I started this blog as I was crazy to take the plunge into Indo-Aryan and Semitic languages. The Indo-Aryan includes languages like Pashto, Persian, Hindi, and Urdu, and Semitic languages are Hebrew, Arabic, Amharic, and Tigrinya.
I am currently studying Persian and Arabic at the same time. Yes, I know, I'm totally crazy and I totally agree. These languages, or at least the Arabic script Naskh (نسخ) is hard, as the implicit short-vowels totally threw me off. My mind is starting to absorb them and from this I am gaining inspiration. I think the script is rather beautiful and mystical.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)