Indian millet

The Indian millet is the name given to two alternatives of the Persan of which one is spoken by a few thousands about zoroastriens around the towns of Yazd and Kerman in Iran and the other is spoken in Afghanistan. The Indian millet was the official language of the court Samanide.

Iranian Indian millet

The Iranian Indian millet is an Iranian invention; Dari=Dara-ei; the language of the valleys (Afghanistan). She is spoken by the zoroastriens about the area about Yazd.

Afghan Indian millet

The second, spoken in Afghanistan is, with the Pashto, the second Official language of the country.

The Indian millet is spoken in north and the west about the country, like with Kabul, the capital located at the east. Approximately a third of the population, is approximately 5 million people: the Inhabitant of Tajik S, Uzbek S, Turkmène S, Hazaras and some Pachtoun S, speak the Indian millet. It is the principal language of the Inhabitants of Tajik, Hazaras and Aïmaks. The Indian millet is used as common language and cultural in Afghanistan.

The Indian millet is written in a alternative of the Arabic alphabet and has many words borrowed from the Arab and the Persan.

The syntax of the Indian millet does not differ much from that of the Persan spoken in Iran, but the tonic Accent is pronounced less out of Indian millet than into Persan. To mark attribution, the Indian millet uses the Suffixe - ruffle . The Voyelle S of the Indian millet differ from those from Persan and the Indian millet has also additional Consonne S.

See too

Internal bonds

Simple: Indian millet

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